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Chuck Norris kicks up Huckabee campaign in Granite State
By LIBBY COPELAND
The Washington Post
Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2007
TILTON – Mike Huckabee is looking pretty tough these days in the race to the Republican nomination, which is why Chuck Norris looks so right by his side on this campaign trip last weekend.
Team Chuckabee, the preacher and the black belt: gearing up for three full days of G-rated, butt-kicking, campaign-ridin' action.
At one stop in a veterans home, Norris hands an autographed card of himself to a 17-year-old kid named Tyler Ayers.
"No way! So cool!" the kid cries out, clutching his tiny picture of Chuck.
"Everyone says the young people don't vote, and I say, 'Well, they're going to vote this time!' " Norris says, gripping another kid's shoulder in a way that's probably meant to be non-threatening, except he's Chuck Norris, so it's hard to tell.
"That's an order!" a grinning Huckabee says from behind Norris' shoulder.
Team Chuckabee is all might and testosterone. If this were an action movie, they'd wear leather jackets and carry rifles.
Huckabee, 52, is a former Arkansas governor and onetime Baptist preacher who wears alligator cowboy boots and whose dramatic rise in the polls has confounded many political types. Norris is known primarily for roundhouse-kicking bad guys on TV and in the movies.
Team Chuckabee is tough, but not too tough for manly regard. At the veterans home, they praise each other.
"He is a man who says what he means and means what he says," Chuck says of Huck.
"We want a military that's as tough as the idea of going up against Chuck Norris in an alley," Huck says of Chuck.
►Huckabee disavows phone tactics (2)
►Slideshow: Huckabee makes it official
In the Huck-and-Chuck show, Huckabee may be running for President, but Norris has the mullet. He looks a good 10 years younger than his 67 years, and his red hair has the saturated color of a man who stares down time and refuses to budge.
Huck and Chuck have not known each other long. Norris says he started paying attention to Huckabee's campaign some months back, attracted by the former governor's political stances on everything from abortion (against it) to "winning the war on terror" (for it).
Norris, who has called Huckabee a dark horse who turned into a "shining stallion," says the Huckabee campaign was just a "spark" three months ago, but it has "turned into a raging fire."
And Huckabee's folksy appeal is fanning those flames. The first visit Friday is to a plant in Boscawen that manufactures copper wire. Norris and his wife, Gena, are delayed flying from their home in Texas, so it's just Huckabee and his wife, Janet, along with several campaign aides, a roomful of plant workers and about 30 reporters, who are scribbling down the candidate's thoughts on taxes, health care, outsourcing.
In the afternoon, Norris reveals that Huckabee visited him not long ago at his ranch in Navasota, Texas.
"We worked out in my gym, and he did pretty good," Norris says of Huckabee, who shed more than 100 pounds some years back through diet and exercise. "We kind of boxed around a little bit."
It's true, says Gena - "lotta testosterone going."
When Chuckabee does a push-up, it's called lifting up America.

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