Good luck.
Maybe without his ilk we won't have these constant splits in the primaries allowing mediocre (but moneyed) candidates to slip through.
I don't think Huckabee realizes that the current approach toward opposing gay marriage isn't working. Very few people outside the evangelical chamber, and I'd venture to guess not even everyone in that chamber, see homosexuality as a danger to society anymore. They don't see the difference. The gay lobby has been extremely effective in pushing an image of false equivalency, and anyone who opposes it in public gets the Anita Bryant treatment. Because of this, we probably only have a couple more years before the courts declare gay marriage a constitutional right, something that was unfathomable just 20 years ago—and all this caterwauling will be for naught.
We, as Christians, need to be more forthright in countering the homosexual agenda and aggressively calling out those who promote it as liars, and this includes their friends. To do this, we need to be prepared to rebut, point by point, the talking points that are now simply accepted as fact, just as they have with our side's arguments. Their arguments have not changed and are as flimsy as raw bacon. Yet we are losing.
Unless we can change the opinions of those who vote, standing for something that is anathema to what the people believe is always going to be a losing proposition. So if Huckabee wants to keep pushing this losing issue, he and his ilk will increasingly make himself irrelevant.