Giuliani, Romney put new ads on air
Republican rivals Rudy Giuliani and Mitt Romney each launched new TV ads aimed at New Hampshire voters.
Giuliani's spot, titled "Promise," shows him asserting that the leading Democrats would raise taxes if they make it to the White House, and again boasting of his record as New York's mayor.
"When I became Mayor of New York City things were out of control," Giuliani says in the ad, which will air on local stations in New Hampshire and Boston. "I lowered taxes. I reduced the growth of government. Made government more accountable. And New York City boomed. I would do these things for America because I know they work. I know that reducing taxes produces more revenues.
"Democrats don't know that," Giuliani continues. "They don't believe it. Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, John Edwards, here's a promise I assure you they'll keep. They are making the promise to raise taxes. The only thing I can tell you in addition to that is they'll raise taxes even more than they promise."
Clinton, Obama, and Edwards have all said that they would let President Bush's tax cuts benefiting the wealthy expire to help pay for healthcare and other programs. They have also proposed tax relief targeted at the middle class.
The Edwards campaign released a statement hitting back at Giuliani.
"It looks like Rudy Giuliani wants to offer America four more years of George W. Bush –- no thanks. John Edwards will deliver tax cut relief to the millions of middle class and working Americans who need it, not the wealthiest few like Giuliani who don't. But Giuliani's attack on John Edwards shows one thing -– that instead of offering any ideas to help the middle class, he's more than willing to ignore the middle class and attack the one Democrat who has proposed bold and detailed plans to help American families."
Romney's ad, titled "Historic Choice," was shown during the CNN/YouTube debate Wednesday night and will also air in Iowa. It repeats a spiel from Romney during the forum -- that America faces serious challenges at home and abroad and needs the leader to confront them.
"It's an election like no other," the announcer says. "An enemy lurks waiting to strike. Our main street economy is competing with mainland China. Legal vs. illegal doesn't seem to matter. Basic values like marriage are suddenly open to debate.
"For these challenges, ordinary isn't good enough," the announcer continues. "We need the leader who gets the big stuff done. Take charge, demand results, no excuses. Mitt Romney – the right experience, the right values, the right time."







The republicans spent 3 Trillion dollars in just 6 years. An increase of 50% in the national debt resulting in a great economy overall.
Give the Democrats 6 years to increase taxes and tax dollars. We will see what happens to the country then.
This is the only fair way to compare results for the two.
Mitt Romney is the best candidate we have had for president in a long time. The ad says it all--right experience, the right values, the right time. Only the nasty anti-Mormon and unAmerican push polls have brought this great American down in the polls in Iowa. They are likely being sponsored by the person who had the most to gain by appealing to people's darker side, their prejudice. That would be the Bible Belt Bigot Huckster Huckabee!!! Shame on you "pastor" Huckabee!!! There is a higher court and you WILL be called into account by a higher judge! Doesn't it say in that Bible you thump so piously, "Judge not that thou be not judged?" You are calling down judgement on Mitt Romney for nothing more than believing in a slightly different version of Christianity than you espouse. Shame!
If I could I would write an ad for Mike Huckabee it would be based on this article. I found this news to me:
Disc jockey for president
Tuesday, Nov 27, 2007
By John Brummett
One of the national writers putting together a profile of Mike Huckabee asked how it might be that this preacher showed such an affinity for popular culture.
The Chuck Norris alliance, the tailgate party in South Carolina with the wrestler, the pardon for Keith Richards, the playing of bass guitar in a rock cover band offering Lynyrd Skynyrd - isn't all that out of character for a man from the Southern Baptist pulpit?
Actually, Huckabee was a radio man before he was a preacher and he has remained more decidedly a media man than a pulpit man.
His superficially likable nature, which provides the essence of his oddly succeeding presidential campaign, comes via a disc jockey's shtick rather than a pastor's. I refer to the rich intonations of his professional voice, the music, the hip topicality, the impersonations, the jokes, the Mr. Glib.
It can't be those radical policies. Outlawing abortion altogether, not merely leaving it to the states, is extreme. A national sales tax to replace the income tax is a gimmick, either scandalously regressive or entirely too difficult to design so that it wouldn't be. He barely scratches the surface on foreign policy with what got described over the weekend as "cheerful know-nothingness." He denies the better points of his record in Arkansas, since they're entirely too moderate for modern Republican primary voters.
His is wholly a candidate of personality, and, as such, is more Don Imus than Billy Graham.
Yes, Imus. Huckabee can be mean and inappropriate. It usually doesn't get revealed until the second impression. He's still making his first out there on the trail.
As a midteen, Huckabee found work, including some on-air, on a Hope radio station. Then he had one of those seminal religious moments. So he figured he'd apply his talents and interests to serve Jesus through Christian broadcasting.
That led him to the seminary, after which, almost by accident, he got preaching work in Pine Bluff, then Texarkana. In both towns, he supplemented the preaching with work for which he was better-suited and that he more enjoyed. That would be a local cable television show.
He attained the presidency of the Arkansas Baptist Convention not so much by conventional preaching as by the clever politics of making himself palatable both to fundamentalists and moderates. It was from there that he moved to secular politics.
When Huckabee was lieutenant governor, needing something to do in that pointless job, he accepted an invitation to substitute for a vacationing radio talk show host. He invited me to be his guest, mainly so he and his callers could berate me. He was fully at home and adept in the radio booth.
One day as he prepared to ascend to the governorship, Huckabee had a news conference. I was struck by his intimacy with the TV cameramen. He joshed with them authoritatively about their equipment, specifically about the comparative modernity of one station's gear versus another's.
Then the producer of his cable show in Texarkana, Gary Underwood, joined the governor's staff. Huckabee and Underwood transformed the governor's conference room into an audiovisual studio. They produced a slick, self-promotional cable television program that they distributed for use by ever-pliable local access channels.
As Huckabee prepared to become governor, he said one of his dreams was to do radio play-by-play for a Razorback football game. Naturally, as the new governor, he was obliged. He described a few downs, smoothly and ably, of course.
From time to time I've written an unoriginal but incisive line, which is that Huckabee is really running for his own show on Fox or MSNBC. I'm sticking with that.
But I'll admit there are moments lately when I wonder if he'll have to go through the motions of being the Republican presidential or vice presidential nominee first.
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John Brummett is a columnist for the Arkansas News Bureau in Little Rock. His e-mail address is jbrummett@arkansasnews.com; his telephone number is (501) 374-0699.
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