Earlier,
I recklessly predicted that if John McCain wins the South Carolina
primary tonight, he will probably win the Republican presidential
nomination.
So while I'm at it, here's another reckless prediction:
If
Mike Huckabee finishes first tonight, he may become the only Republican
since 1980 to win South Carolina and not end up as the nominee.
I
contradict history at my own peril, but this much is clear: Huckabee
would have a much harder time than McCain springboarding from South
Carolina to a decisive win on Super-Duper Tuesday. For starters, he has
yet to expand his base beyond evangelicals. In Iowa, he won 46 percent
of the evangelical vote, and if he wins tonight, they'll be largely
responsible. But while there are enough evangelicals in the Palmetto
and Hawkeye States to propel a candidate to victory, the landscape is
vastly different in Florida, California, Illinois, New York and many of
the 22 other Feb. 5 states. (See Michigan, where he won only 16 percent
of the vote.) In fact, Huckabee's early appeals to social
conservatives--this week he provoked Fred Thompson's ire by calling the
Constitution a "living, breathing document" while arguing for
anti-abortion and anti-gay-marriage amendments--have convinced some
moderate Republicans that he's a religious narrowcaster. After Florida,
he'll only have one week to allay their suspicions.
And he'll
have no money or organization to do it with. On the trail, Huckabee
often argues that he's the David to his rivals' Goliaths. That's all
well and good in Iowa and South Carolina--you can win in the early
states with strong stumping skills and passionate supporters. But this
year's "national primary" may turn on expensive, rapid-fire ad buys and
get-out-the-vote efforts, making it very tough for Huckabee to keep up.
That's assuming he wins tonight. If he loses, Florida becomes the firewall. But he's currently in fourth place
there, and it will only get harder to climb in the polls after
losing to McCain, who's already in first. Especially with a rich,
rejuvenated Romney and single-minded Giuliani standing between him and
the frontrunner. The veep slot--he's a great fit for McCain or
Giuliani--never looked so good.
I don't mean to be all doom and gloom. A big win tonight could
separate Huckabee from the field and catapult him to a surprise victory
in the Sunshine State. At that point, he may have so weakened his
rivals that he'll be the last man standing on Feb. 6.
But the
odds against that outcome are long. More likely, a Huckabee win in
South Carolina makes Florida an evenly matched four-man race--and
increases the chances that the Republican race continues to the
convention.