The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Wednesday shows a new national leader in the race for the Republican Presidential Nomination. While enjoying an amazing surge, Mike Huckabee has earned support from 20% of Likely Republican Primary Voters nationwide.Rudy's three points behind at 17%.
Most of the Huckabee-news hitting the left side of the blogoshere these days is about one guy: Wayne Dumond. It shows, among other things, how crazy the Clinton-hating got in the mid-to-late 90s and how deep Huckabee was in it.
Wayne Dumond was a guy who was in prison for some very bad things. He was paroled while Mike Huckabee was governor of Arkansas. Oh yea, the rightwing media thought that a former governor of Arkansas (and that would be Bill Clinton) was too hard on Dumond because Dumond had raped a distant relative of his. Atrios describes things this way:
Dumond was let go because right wing lunatics believed that Bill Clinton sent his goons to castrate an "innocent" man because one of his "alleged" victims was a distant relative. That this story was, you know, pretty much insane didn't stop it from getting regular play in the conservative press.
Now this has hit the Huffington Post:
As governor of Arkansas, Mike Huckabee aggressively pushed for the early release of a convicted rapist despite being warned by numerous women that the convict had sexually assaulted them or their family members, and would likely strike again. The convict went on to rape and murder at least one other woman.
Confidential Arkansas state government records, including letters from these women, obtained by the Huffington Post and revealed publicly for the first time, directly contradict the version of events now being put forward by Huckabee.
Waas goes on:
While on the campaign trail, Huckabee has claimed that he supported the 1999 release of Wayne Dumond because, at the time, he had no good reason to believe that the man represented a further threat to the public. Thanks to Huckabee's intervention, conducted in concert with a right-wing tabloid campaign on Dumond's behalf, Dumond was let out of prison 25 years before his sentence would have ended.
Murray Waas had the story of the parole here. Huckabee said there was no way to have known what Dumond was going to do after being released. Huckabee met in private with the parole board before Dumond was released. He never checked the parole boards files.
Had Huckabee examined in detail the parole board’s files regarding Dumond, he would have known Dumond had compiled a lengthy criminal resume.
In 1972, Dumond was arrested in the beating death of a man in Oklahoma. Dumond was not charged in that case after agreeing to testify for the prosecution against two others. But he admitted on the witness stand that he was among those who struck the murder victim with a claw hammer.
In 1973, Dumond was arrested and placed on probation for five years for admitting in Oregon to molesting a teen-age girl in the parking lot of a shopping center.
Three years later, according to Arkansas State Police records, Dumond admitted to raping an Arkansas woman. (Dumond later repudiated the confession, saying he was coerced by police.) Dumond was never formally charged in that case; the woman, saying she feared for her life, did not press charges.
Waas analyses the rightwing coverage supporting Dumond:
The governor was also apparently relying on information he got from Steve Dunleavy, first as a correspondent for the tabloid television show “A Current Affair” and later as a columnist for the New York Post.
Much of what Dunleavy has written about the Dumond saga has been either unverified or is demonstrably untrue. Dunleavy has all but accused [Clinton relative] Ashley Stevens of having fabricated her rape, derisively referring to her in one column as a “so-called victim,” and brusquely asserting in another, “That rape never happened.”
The columnist wrote that Dumond was a “Vietnam veteran with no record” when in fact he did have a criminal record. He claimed there existed DNA evidence by “one of the most respected DNA experts in the country” to exonerate Dumond, even though there was no such evidence. He wrote that Bill Clinton had personally intervened to keep Dumond in prison, even though Clinton had recused himself in 1990 from any involvement in the case because of his distant relationship with Stevens.
Republican political ethics clear, plain and simple.
But, but, but... he believes in promoting "life."
ReplyDeleteIT find it interesting that those who objected to the Willie Horton ad are now promoting this.
ReplyDeleteThat say keep it up guys.
What is it that makes it most interesting to you, Mein Heir? The fact that the circumstances are completely different, or the fact that you have defended the Willie Horton debacle all along?
ReplyDeleteJohn K. says: This is odd. This blog supports a President who was a rapist and are now opposed to a Gov who paroled a guy who raped. I guess it is all in the mind of a bigoted lefty.
ReplyDeleteWhat is it that makes it most interesting to you, Mein Heir? The fact that the circumstances are completely different, or the fact that you have defended the Willie Horton debacle all along?
ReplyDeleteWhat is the difference that makes this acceptable and Horton not?
Horton was not paroled. he escaped during a furlough program supported by Dukakis.
Dukakis did not lobby for the release of Horton.
Horton did not kill his victim after he escaped.
The race hustlers called the ad racist.
I view them both as fair.
Mein Heir, I don't understand why you asked the question and then answered it, but to put a finer point on it:
ReplyDelete-- Dukakis, as you say, was not personally involved in the release of Horton. In fact, the program under which Horton was released was set up under the prior Republican governor.
-- The Bush campaign ran television commercials about Horton's release. They played up the fact that Horton was black.
-- Dukakis never lied about his role in the matter.
On the other hand
-- Huckabee WAS personally involved in getting Dumond paroled.
-- The Dems have not run any TV commercials about Dumond.
-- Huckabee has attempted to mislead the public about his bad judgement (if not political corruption) in the Dumond matter.
Were there any other questions?
Don't bother to thank me. We libs enjoy educating you benighted Wingnuts. Too bad the Laughing Chickenhawk is beyond redemption, but, what the hell, it's fun to watch him do his funny dance. And of course it's even more fun because he's me.
I knew it, you genius bastard!
ReplyDeleteJohn K. says: Hey I hear Bubba has a private residence on his NY property where he conducts his attacks on women. Is this true lefties? Brian Lamb was denied accesss to view the 'love nest' when he toured the Clinton house. LMAO LOL LOL You lefties are something.
ReplyDeleteJohn, if you can drop the Offensive Idiot act (no one who can type could be as stupid as you pretend to be) for just a sec, I have a serious question for you:
ReplyDeleteWhat is it with this absolute fixation you guys have with Bubba? He's just another political hack who will likely never run for office again. Obviously, you guys don't care about sexual peccadillos, so why do you constantly go after his overheated libido? Do you really think it offends liberals? Why would you think that? Slick Willy ran as a moderate conservative and ran the Executive Branch as a less moderate conservative. (His wife will likely exhibit even more rightish behavior.) When you attack him, you are going after one of your own. Why do you do it? Seriously.
If you have it in you, I would appreciate an answer. If not, just keep doing the Laughing Chickenhawk thing and keep us amused.
John K. says: Hillary Clinton has to get back to the White House. After all, Bubba needs all that secret service protection to shield him from rape allegations. And to think you lefties voted for him.
ReplyDeleteShitrock,
ReplyDeleteLooks like you have your answer.
Anon: Yep. Not surprising, is it? I'm afraid our Laughing Chickenhawk is also a One-Trick Pony.
ReplyDelete