Mike Huckabee Defends ‘Merry Christmas’ Ad, Says Cross Imagery is Incidental

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Dec. 18: The TV ad features former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee in a red sweater in front of what appears to be a white cross and Christmas tree. (Huckabee for President, Inc.)

In a new television ad debuting Tuesday in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, GOP presidential candidate Mike Huckabee does the unthinkable - he wishes early voters “Merry Christmas.”

Wearing a red sweater and standing before a glowing Christmas tree as “Silent Night” plays in the background, the former Arkansas governor asks viewers if they’re “about worn out of all the television commercials you’ve been seeing, mostly about politics.”

Behind Huckabee appears to be a white cross, which may be intersecting shelf lines or a window pane and slowly moves to the right on the screen until it’s behind his head.

But the ordained Baptist minister, who has been riding a wave of evangelical support with his open religious appeals, said Tuesday that it’s just a bookshelf and defended the ad.

“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, speaking in Houston, Texas.

Click here to watch the ad titled, “What Really Matters”

In the ad, Huckabee says, “At this time of year, sometimes it’s nice to pull aside from all of that and remember that what really matters is the celebration of the birth of Christ.”

“I hope you and your family have a magnificent Christmas season. God bless you and Merry Christmas.”

Will Mike Huckabee’s new TV ad where he mentions Christ by name and displays imagery of the cross help him or hurt him?

Help him (76%)


Have no effect (16%)


Hurt him (8%)

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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 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 “nothing more than 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.

Meanwhile, rival Mitt Romney launched a new TV ad yesterday slamming Huckabee, the ex-Arkansas governor, for commuting the sentences of 1,033 criminals - including 12 convicted murderers. “Huckabee granted more clemencies than the previous three governors combined,” says the 30-second Romney attack ad.

“The difference between us is that I did something he never had to do. I carried out the death penalty 16 times, more than any other governor in my state’s history,” Huckabee told reporters in Los Angeles before attending a Beverly Hills fundraiser. “That’s hardly soft on crime when you make that tough decision and actually carry it out.”

Romney’s state of Massachusetts does not have capital punishment.

The Romney-Huckabee spat continued throughout the day Tuesday.

“Interestingly, Mr. Romney has commended President Bush for the pardon of Scooter Libby, yet he brags that he never gave one as governor,” Huckabee said in Houston.

Returning fire in Columbia, S.C., Romney reiterated that Huckabee is “liberal” on crime and immigration.

Asked about the Christmas ad, Romney said, “We recognize the diversity of faith and we unite over our commitment to religious liberty, and I hope Governor Huckabee, like all of us, is supportive to the diversity of faith and the liberty to worship God as they choose, and I trust that he and the other candidates will do just that.”

Not surprisingly, Huckabee sounded Monday as if he wanted to declare a holiday truce among the Republican presidential contenders.

“I think the country could use a little good will and peace on earth a little more than they can some tit for tat in the political arena,” Huckabee said.

FOX News’ Carl Cameron, Serafin Gomez and Shushannah Walshe, and The New York Post and Associated Press contributed to this report.

885 Responses to “Mike Huckabee Defends ‘Merry Christmas’ Ad, Says Cross Imagery is Incidental”

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Comment by Becky

ahem… whether your religious or not….. who gives if he has a cross in the vid…..

omfg…. freaking idiots

 
Comment by John, the Baptist

Mike Huckabee: If you are listening, please disregard the name calling, politically correct, constitutionally incorrect LEFT WING LIBERAL citizens, politicians, and media. Keep talking about your personal convictions, spiritual and political, be courageous, hold your head up high regardless of the criticism or regardless of whether you make or lose ground politically.
John McCain: If you want to be the next President of the United States, you would be wise to forget the pundits and pollsters and have the courage to choose (as your Vice Presidential running mate) a man of character, a straight talking preacher who may not be the best politician but a man who has been called to be a voice crying in the wilderness as a needed Christian leader in America. The reason our great Country (that was formed and framed by men who prayed for Divine guidance) is now going down the path of Sodom and Gomorrah is that well intentioned Christians were duped into thinking that they were not allowed to be involved in civil government leadership positions or political life. So if you John McCain want the votes of 16 million Evangelicals I would strongly suggest you choose Mike Huckabee as your running mate; otherwise you might as well cast your vote for the Democrats.

 
Comment by RJ.Coyle

Like it or not,this country was founded on CHRISTAIN principles. The first reading book,authorized by Congress for PUBLIC schools was the Holy BIBLE.Freedom to express my Christain Faith is my right as a citizen of Hezaven and America.

 
Comment by Airborne ..

What’s wrong with a cross ?? I prefer someone who professes Christian values rather than the godless creeps taking over our courts and gov’ts.. — We have the guarantee OF religion; not a guarantee FROM religion …

 
Comment by The Texan in response to Evan

Evan, you must not know what Article VI actually says. It is to keep religion out of State control and vice versa. It says nothing that you may not speak of your own spirituality under any circumstance. That would in turn, be an unconstitutional violation of the First Amendment. Do you think that the Founding Fathers would have straight contradicted themselves like that? Come on. Maybe you should put your daughter in public school so she doesn’t end up with your twisted forthcomings.

 

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