
Dec 18, 2007 6:30 pm US/Central
Huckabee Defends Christmas Ad
HOUSTON (AP) ―
Republican presidential candidate
Mike Huckabee
on Tuesday defended his Christmas ad amid suggestions that the ordained
Baptist minister had gone too far mixing religion and politics.
The ad, which is airing in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina,
shows Huckabee in front of a Christmas tree as he says, "Are you about
worn out by all the television commercials you've been seeing, mostly
about politics? Well, I don't blame you. At this time of year sometimes
it's nice to pull aside from all of that and just remember that what
really matters is the celebration of the birth of Christ and being with
our family and friends."
Huckabee is courting evangelical voters and other religious
conservatives in his bid to win the Iowa caucuses Jan. 3. In Texas for
a fundraiser, he said the ad was a harmless holiday greeting even
though it excludes other religions.
"If we are so politically correct in this country that a person
can't say enough of the nonsense with the political attack ads could we
pause for a few days and say Merry Christmas to each other then we're
really, really in trouble as a country," Huckabee said.
Catholic League president Bill Donahue said Huckabee went beyond
wishing people a joyous holiday. Donahue said he was especially
disturbed by the cross-like image created by a white bookcase in the
background of the ad, saying he believed it was a subliminal message.
"What he's trying to say to the evangelicals in western Iowa (is):
I'm the real thing," Donahue said Tuesday on Fox News Channel's "Fox
and Friends. "You know what, sell yourself on your issues, not on what
your religion is."
Huckabee said the bookshelf is just a bookshelf and shrugged off
the controversy: "I will confess this: If you play the spot backwards
it says, 'Paul is dead. Paul is dead."'
He was joking about the Beatles' recording of "The White Album" and
the urban legend that if a portion of the album is played backwards,
the words "Paul is dead" is heard, a reference to the very much alive
Paul McCartney.
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