David Huckabee | |
---|---|
Born |
David James Huckabee July 22, 1980 |
Occupation | Wholesale mortgage lender |
Employer | Taylor, Bean & Whitaker |
Spouse(s) | Lauren Brown |
Parent(s) | Janet and Mike Huckabee |
David James Huckabee (born July 22, 1980) is an American mortgage broker and one of two-time presidential candidate and former Arkansas governor, Mike Huckabee's two sons. David Huckabee's wife Lauren, an attorney, worked on Mike Huckabee's campaign for president, having registered Mike as a candidate and having served as "ballot access and delegate director". Both David and Lauren Huckabee have been listed as payees for the Mike Huckabee campaign.
Huckabee attended Arkansas State University (ASU), where he majored in political science and served as president of both the union advisory board and the student government association. He ran two companies while at ASU, "Pyro Erectus" and "H&K Enterprises", each of which had contracts with ASU for more than $5000.00. When the City of Jonesboro warned him to register those two companies, he initially refused, on the grounds that these entities were "partnerships" which did not need to register. He eventually paid the $62.50 fee with 6,250 pennies. Huckabee joined the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity and his father, then governor, Mike Huckabee followed suit, joining in 2007.
While a freshman at ASU, Huckabee said in an interview with the school newspaper that he chose to go to school in Arkansas so he could get involved in the state's political process. Huckabee said, "my dream is to either be the president or to be the one who makes the president the President."
During his father's 2008 presidential campaign, both Newsweek and the Los Angeles Times reported that the younger Huckabee had been dismissed as a Boy Scout camp counselor in 1998. Huckabee, then two weeks shy of his 18th birthday, was alleged to have been involved in the hanging and stoning to death of a stray dog.
When an animal rights group sought records from the Arkansas state police the request was denied. John Bailey, the then-police chief reported that "(Mike Huckabee's) chief of staff and personal lawyer both pressured him to write a letter officially denying the local prosecutor's request." Mike Huckabee fired Bailey seven months later. In December 2007, Bailey told Newsweek that the governor told him "I've lost confidence in your ability to do your job" and "I couldn't get you to help me with my son when I had that problem."