Iowa ad gambit may dent Huckabee's populist image
By Ed Stoddard
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (Reuters) - A political gambit over a negative campaign ad may hurt presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee's populist image just as he tops Iowa's polls in the race for the White House.
On Monday, three days before Iowa holds the first state nominating contest for the November 2008 election, the 52-year-old Huckabee told a packed news conference he had decided not to run a scathing TV commercial countering rival Mitt Romney's attacks on his record.
Then Huckabee proceeded to show reporters the commercial, which ensured that TV cable and network news channels would broadcast parts of it for free.
The advertisement took issue with Romney, a 60-year-old former Republican governor of Massachusetts, on a range of subjects from fiscal policy to abortion and accused him of being dishonest.
A Baptist preacher, Huckabee told reporters he had changed his mind about the ad because he wanted to run a positive campaign. But critics said that by showing it to the media, he made sure his attacks on Romney would be seen and heard.
Analysts saw political calculation in the act. Some said the incident was the latest of several gaffes that ultimately would burst Huckabee's surprise bubble at a critical moment in the lengthy presidential campaign.
"It looks slippery and starts to suggest he's not ready for prime time," said Stephen Hess, an expert on presidential politics at the private Brookings Institution in Washington.
Hess said a political blooper right before the Iowa caucuses can make a difference "because so many make up their mind at the last minute." Continued...



