Welcome!

The purpose for this blog is to provide homeschoolers with information about issues that are pertinent to the homeschool community. Mike Huckabee has been a great supporter of the right to homeschool and of parental rights in general. So this homeschool family hearts Huckabee!

Saturday, February 23, 2008

An Open Letter to Texas, Ohio, Rhode Island and Vermont homeschoolers

Dear Texas Homeschool Leaders,

As a former state homeschool leader (Treasurer, Home Educators Association of Virginia, 1997-2006), I am writing to encourage your participation, and that of your group, in the upcoming primary on Tuesday, March 4th. I have thoroughly investigated the current presidential candidates, and I am asking you to consider voting for Mike Huckabee, and to consider sending non-partisan voters' guides to your members.

HUCKABEE AND HOMESCHOOLING
Gov. Huckabee's positions on homeschooling and educational choice are well documented in his record. A video detailing Gov. Huckabee's support for homeschooling during his tenure in Arkansas can be viewed here in Quicktime format: http://www.hucksarmy.com/video.php?vide ... eschooling
or here, on YouTube (same video): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L-q0h1cb6xE

As you can see in the video, Mike Huckabee was the first governor in the nation to appoint a homeschooling parent to his State Board of Education. Prior to his time in office, Arkansans were saddled with some of the most onerous homeschooling laws in the nation. During the 1997 legislative session, Gov. Huckabee lobbied for and signed into law a bill that dramatically reduced homeschooling restrictions.

Here are two other important links detailing Gov. Huckabee's positions on education, homeschooling, and school choice:
http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewPolitics.asp ... 1228a.html (This one is an interview specifically about school choice.)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XamEl9Vj8xQ (This is an interview with David Brody about education.)

As is apparent in these interviews, Gov. Huckabee believes homeschoolers need less regulation, not more. ("They're amazing. Leave them alone," he says to David Brody.) He favors state tax credits for home- and private schools, and although he did not support a state-wide voucher system which was debated in Arkansas, it was because that system was also not supported by the private schools in the state which would have been most impacted by the changes. Private school administrators feared governmental intervention should they accept public funding (a concern we often face as homeschoolers). Full explanations can be found in the above interviews. Governor Huckabee clearly believes that parents, and not any governmental body, have the right and duty to decide the course of their own children's education.

As a governor, he was also responsible for the Arkansas public schools; in fact, he inherited a lawsuit and a state supreme court decision mandating costly improvements to that system. Due to his leadership, those schools, previously ranked 48th in the nation, have most recently received a ranking of 8th.

There has been a great deal of misinformation regarding Gov. Huckabee and his role in promoting homeschooling legislation in Arkansas during his 10+ years as governor. Most of this information has come from competing campaigns. I'd like to try to point you to some truth to help clear up the record.

In 1999, two very restrictive bills began to gain momentum in the Arkansas Legislature. These bills would have done significant damage to homeschooling freedoms, returning homeschoolers to the level of governmental oversight they had under Bill Clinton. In order to counteract the bills, one legislator who was also a homeschooling father promoted an alternate bill that was not as restrictive. It is this bill that has been used as "political ammunition" against Huckabee. HSLDA wrote about that bill, and their endorsement of Gov. Huckabee (quoted in part, link to full text below):


Quote:
January 2008

...As discussed in this article, the Arkansas legislature passed a homeschool law in 1999, which was signed by Governor Huckabee. The law represented a step backward for homeschool freedoms.

Arkansas' homeschool law was enacted in 1985 when Bill Clinton was governor. It was one of the most restrictive laws in the nation...

Prior to the 1997 legislative session, the Arkansas Christian Home Education Association and HSLDA approached Governor Huckabee about supporting changes in the homeschool law. Governor Huckabee actively supported and lobbied legislators to get a bill passed which transformed Arkansas into a much more favorable state for homeschoolers. HSLDA attorney Dewitt Black wrote Governor Huckabee a thank-you letter. He replied, "Dee, it was my pleasure and privilege to get behind this effort on behalf of home school students in Arkansas, and I sincerely appreciated the backing of the Home School Legal Defense Association and the Arkansas Christian Home Education Association."...

Only two years later, however, during the 1999 legislative session, two bad bills were introduced to impose restrictions on the homeschoolers. There was a great deal of momentum to get these bills through.

To avoid a major step backward for homeschool freedom, local homeschool leaders worked with a homeschooling father in the House of Representatives to sponsor a bill which would place some additional regulations on homeschoolers but would avoid the much worse provisions of the other two bills. HSLDA could not support this compromise bill because we always stand on the side of homeschool freedom and against government regulation. We opposed the bill and urged our members to lobby against the bill without success.

The political reality, however, was that the homeschoolers were going to have to give the opposition something or they were going to get something much worse. As far as Governor Huckabee was concerned, it was a bill the homeschoolers wanted. It was sponsored by a homeschooling father in the legislature and had the support of the Arkansas Family Council. The bill was enacted and became Act 1117.

HSLDA-PAC has spoken directly with Governor Huckabee and we believe that by his words and actions he is a firm supporter of homeschooling.

Link: http://www.hsldapac.org/dnn/Home/Govern ... fault.aspx

In Arkansas, a simple 51% majority is all that is needed to overturn the governor's veto, which means if a bill passes, it is veto-proof. When a bad bill threatens, the legislature has to keep it from passing or put another, more palatable, bill in its place. Gov Huckabee couldn't just veto the bill that would restrict homeschooling. He had to work with the legislature to find another solution. As homeschool leaders, many of us have been in similar situations, having to accept compromise bills with the hope of passing better law during the next session.

THE RACE IS NOT OVER, AND TEXAS, OHIO, VERMONT AND RHODE ISLAND MATTERS!
We believe that Governor Huckabee is the best choice for homeschoolers, and Texans can make all the difference in this race.

Gov. Huckabee has stated that he will not leave the race until a candidate receives 1191 PLEDGED delegates, effectively ensuring that voters in states like Texas, Mississippi, Vermont, and Ohio still matter. A win in Texas would boost his momentum going into the many remaining Red states, where John McCain's following is not as strong. (Note that, of the 17 states McCain has won to date, 11 usually vote Democrat, and 10 have not voted for a Republican since 1988 or earlier. Huckabee's wins, however, are 100% in Republican states, which bodes far better for the general election in November.)

It is not necessary for Gov. Huckabee to receive 1191 delegates himself; he only needs to keep John McCain from doing so to take this to a brokered convention. At the convention, all candidates still in the race would have the opportunity to address the delegates before the voting takes place. With his superior communication skills, and his strong moral stance on life, marriage, family, and freedom, we believe Governor Huckabee would be able to sway the votes. (For those who haven't seen him in action, take a look at some of the videos available at http://www.hucksarmy.com/video.php, like the FRC Straw Poll from last September.) If he does not win the nomination there, however, he is committed to supporting the Republican nominee.

Some would say it hurts the party to force a brokered convention. Ronald Reagan did not think so. In 1976, because he felt very strongly that the Republican Party was going against its principles, he bravely challenged the incumbent Republican president, Gerald Ford. He took his race all the way to a brokered convention, where he lost on the first vote. Immediately, for party unity, he proceeded to put all of his support and influence behind Ford, but Jimmy Carter won the general election. After four years of Carter's administration, the country was ready for Reagan's leadership, and he won in 1980 and again in 1984. It is interesting to note that Abraham Lincoln won a brokered convention in 1860 after trailing on the first ballot.

VOTERS' GUIDES
For the benefit of your members, I am attaching links to two voters' guides. These non-partisan guides have been approved by Matt Staver of Liberty Council for distribution by churches and non-profit organizations. If you are a 501(c)(3) organization, your group cannot endorse or lobby for any particular candidate without threatening your non-profit status. You can, however, distribute guides which outline all the candidates' positions on various issues. Some organizations who distribute guides also include links to their state Democratic and Republican party websites. I hope you will consider sending these guides to your members immediately, to help them make informed voting decisions.

Wall Builders' Guide: http://www.wallbuilders.com/downloads/n ... sGuide.pdf
Faith 2 Action Guide: http://www.f2a.org/NewsStory.cfm?Story_ID=2604

Thank you for reading such a long letter. I hope this information clears up some of the confusion that has dominated many of the homeschool discussion boards, and I hope you will vote for Mike Huckabee on March 4th!

Blessings,

A Call to Texans (and a history lesson too about Texas!)

Monday, February 18, 2008

Add winners of Kansas, Maryland, Virginia, Washington DC and Louisiana

Add the winners of the following states to your maps:

Kansas - Mike Huckabee
Louisiana - Mike Huckabee
Virginia - John McCain
Maryland - John McCain
Washington DC - John McCain

Up next:

Washington - Feb 19 - 40 delegates
Wisconsin - Feb 19 - 40 delegates

March 4:

Texas- 138 delegates
Ohio - 88
Vermont- 18
Rhode Island - 19

March 11 - Mississippi - 35 delegates

April 22 - Pennsylvania - 74

May 6 - Indiana - 56 delegates
North Carolina - 69

May 13 - Nebraska - 32
West Virginia

May 20 - Kentucky - 45

May 27 - Idaho - 31

June 3 - Montana - 24
New Mexico - 32
South Dakota - 26

Republican National Convention
September 1-4 in Minneapolis-St Paul, Minnesota

Saturday, February 9, 2008

Dr James Dobson endorses Gov Mike Huckabee

Dr. Dobson Endorses Gov. Huckabee

Dr. James Dobson issued the following statement Thursday, speaking as a private citizen.

I am endorsing Gov. Mike Huckabee for President of the United States today. My decision comes in the wake of my statement on Super Tuesday that I could not vote for Sen. John McCain, even if he goes on to win the Republican nomination. His record on the institution of the family and other conservative issues makes his candidacy a matter of conscience and concern for me.

That left two pro-family candidates whom I could support, but I was reluctant to choose between them. However, the decision by Gov. Mitt Romney to put his campaign "on hold" changes the political landscape. The remaining candidate for whom I could vote is Gov. Huckabee. His unwavering positions on the social issues, notably the institution of marriage, the importance of faith and the sanctity of human life, resonate deeply with me and with many others. That is why I will support Gov. Huckabee through the remaining primaries, and will vote for him in the general election if he should get the nomination. Obviously, the governor faces an uphill struggle, given the delegates already committed to Sen. McCain. Nevertheless, I believe he is our best remaining choice for President of the United States.

(NOTE: Dr. Dobson made these statements as a private citizen. This article is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as a reflection of the opinions of Focus on the Family or Focus on the Family Action.)

Friday, February 8, 2008

Activity #17 Calculate Your State's Delegates

Look up your state's delegate information here:

Write a summary of how many delegates your state has to the Republican National Convention and how that number is determined. Also determine if your state gives all the delegates to the winner or if they are distributed by congressional district. For example:

3 x # of congressional districts + 10 at large delegates + bonus delegates = grand total

Determine which 3 states have the largest number of delegates.

For younger students, discuss that the states with the most people living in them get the most points (delegates) for the candidate. Explain that winning some states give more points (delegates) than other states.

More Primaries and Caucuses Feb 9 & 12

The next round of caucuses are Saturday Feb 9

Kansas - caucus
Louisiana - primary
Washington - caucus

Then Tuesday Feb 12 :

Virginia - open primary (Independents may vote in Republican primary)
Maryland - primary
Washington DC - primary

Romney Suspends Campaign

Mitt Romney has suspended his campaign and not endorsed another candidate which means that he keeps his delegates until the Republican National Convention. Here's a link to the official Republican National Convention Guidelines for 2008. It's a long document but interesting read.

Here's another interesting article that gives the general overview of how delegates are distributed by state and bound in voting at the convention.

Basically states are awarded delegates based on the number of congressional districts (3 per district) and each state receives 10 at large delegates and then can receive bonus delegates for Republican governors, senators, legislatures, etc. Rules differ by state determining if the delegates are bound to vote for the candidate that won their state's primary or caucus. The only states that are not legally bound to their state's winner (only morally bound) are Ohio, Washington, North Carolina and the Virgin Islands.

Activity #16 - Super Tuesday Results

Massachusetts - Romney
Connecticut - McCain
New Jersey - McCain
Delaware - McCain
West Virginia - Huckabee
Illinois - McCain
Missouri - McCain
Oklahoma - McCain
Georgia - Huckabee
Alabama - Huckabee
Tennessee - Huckabee
Arkansas - Huckabee
Minnesota - Romney
North Dakota - Romney
Montana - Romney
Wyoming - Romney
Utah - Romney
Arizona - McCain
California - McCain

Delegate counts are difficult to calculate as I've seen news sources with different numbers but here's the round numbers:

McCain - 707
Huckabee - 197
Romney - 250

Friday, February 1, 2008

Great Picture from the California debate

Great Remarks by Governor Huckabee

Activity #15 - Florida Over Now for Super Tuesday

The winner of Florida was John McCain so add this to your map. Up next are the Super Tuesday states. About half of these states are not winner take all delegates. The following are winner-take-all delegates:

Arizona - 53
Connecticut - 30
Delaware - 18
Georgia - 72
Minnesota - 41
Missouri - 58
New Jersey - 52
New York - 101
Oklahoma - 41
Utah - 36
West Virginia- 30

A total of 1023 delegates will be selected on Super Tuesday. A total of 1191 is needed to secure the Republican nomination. It will be nearly impossible for any candidate to secure the needed delegates on Feb 5 which means the next few states will play a key role:

Here are the states following Feb 5:

Feb 9:
Kansas caucus- 39
Louisiana primary - 46
Washington caucus - 40

Feb 10 - Maine caucus - 20

Feb 12:
Maryland - 37
Virginia - 63

Feb 19 :
Wisconsin - 40

March 4:
Ohio - 88
Rhode Island - 19
Texas - 138
Vermont - 18

Here's a good site with the breakdown of how delegates are chosen in each state and if they are bound by law to the popular vote:

http://www.republicansource.com/states/vermont.htm