Huckabee Says Joke Was Not About Suicide
GOP Candidate Says He Was Making Light Of Campaign Spending, Not Suicide
-
Former Arkansas governor and Republican presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee answers a question during the Republican Presidential Debate at the Ford Community & Performing Arts Center, Oct. 9, 2007 in Dearborn, Michigan. (GEOFF ROBINS/AFP/Getty Images)
-
In-Depth 2008 Presidential Hopefuls Profiles and the latest news on the Democrats and Republicans running for the White House.
"I would never intentionally hurt the feelings of anyone for any reason, and I certainly was not making light of suicide, but of the excesses of campaign spending," Huckabee said Wednesday in a statement issued by his campaign.
In a television interview Tuesday, Huckabee joked that better-financed candidates could be "sitting in a warm tub of water with razor blades." Suicide-prevention counselors called the remark irresponsible. It was not the first time Huckabee has used the image of suicide to make a point.
In 2002, asked for his plan to address a tight state budget after an economic downturn, Huckabee said, "Sitting in a warm tub of water with a lot of razor blades."
Huckabee used a similar comment after the 2005 off-year elections when asked whether President Bush's low approval ratings hurt Republicans.
"We did not win seats, but we didn't have those seats," Huckabee said. "But let me just say, as bad a day as it may have appeared to be, I don't hear any Republican who's sitting in a tub of warm water with a handful of razor blades ready to say it's all over."
Facing criticism over his remarks, Huckabee - a southern Baptist minister - said he understands the seriousness of suicide.
"During my years as a pastor, I counseled dozens of people who were confronted with suicide and I am well aware of the seriousness of the issue. Suicide has touched many families, including mine, and I would never do anything that would hurt others or add to their grief," Huckabee said.
The American Foundation for Suicide Prevention criticized Huckabee's remarks in an open letter to the former Arkansas governor earlier Wednesday.
"While we understand that these statements were meant to be humorous, they instead make light of suicide, and contribute to the myth that suicide is a rational choice rather than the fatal consequence of mental illness," wrote its executive director, Robert Gebbia.
The National Hopeline Network, which runs the 1-800-SUICIDE help line, criticized Huckabee in a statement issued Tuesday night.
Huckabee, who rarely speaks from prepared remarks, has repeatedly had to defend himself against slips of the tongue and jokes he made during his 10½ years as governor.
When radio personality Don Imus interviewed Huckabee last year about his 110-pound weight loss after a diabetes diagnosis, the governor joked that he had spent time in a concentration camp. Huckabee dismissed a Jewish group's criticism, saying he hadn't made a reference to Jews or the Holocaust.
Huckabee also angered state Democrats in 2000 when he joked that Arkansas was a "banana republic" and that Democrats would attempt to steal the presidential election from Republican George W. Bush.
"I hate to think I'd have to live my life without a sense of humor," Huckabee said last year.
This also isn't the first time Huckabee's "razor blades" line has drawn criticism. When Huckabee ran for re-election in 2002, his Democratic opponent, Jimmie Lou Fisher, criticized him for the comment.
"I hope he was joking, but that's no answer for the problems we got," Fisher told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette then. Fisher declined to comment on Huckabee's latest suicide remark.
Rex Nelson, who served as Huckabee's communications director in the governor's office, said he didn't believe Huckabee's off-color comments drew the ire of average voters as much as it did his political opponents.
"Mike Huckabee is a very upfront guy with a good sense of humor, and I think people understand that," said Nelson, now the alternate federal co-chairman of the Delta Regional Authority. "He's not programmed like so many people who run for office in that country. I always found it refreshing to listen to somebody who's not so programmed."
Hendrix College political scientist Jay Barth said Huckabee's quips haven't hurt him in the state politically. The former governor enjoyed a 55 percent approval rating in his final months in office. Huckabee left office in January because of term limits.
Despite meager fundraising, Huckabee has distinguished himself from his better-funded rivals through his debate performances and one-liners. He could lose some of that appeal if his comments come off as too edgy, Barth said.
"He has differentiated himself as being an optimistic, positive candidate," Barth said. "This doesn't feel as positive as the demeanor that has really benefited him."
© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- I contrasted how the media treats 2 individuals who made similar suicide references. Personally attacking me because you disagree negates any consideration of your opinion in this matter.
Posted by Dale_Fitz at 10:21 AM : Oct 12, 2007
I merely pointed out the fact that YOU most assuredly are part of the problem by getting all indignant about who is being treated more unfairly by the media when it comes to this kind of assinine reporting. The media wouldn''t behave this way if people like you didn''t take the bait. - Reply to this comment
- sftodd said:
Dale? Two wrongs make a right? Get your head out of your ___ ....Dale is the perfect example of the stupid spoiled little child screaming, "He started it!!!"
I contrasted how the media treats 2 individuals who made similar suicide references. Personally attacking me because you disagree negates any consideration of your opinion in this matter. - Reply to this comment
- He''''s a laughable candidate, but so was george?
Posted by beecuster at 02:09 PM : Oct 11, 2007
Exactly!!!! - Reply to this comment
- Huck has failed to simply read and believe the Bible and the Constitution. Vote Ron Paul for President.
Posted by dutchfarmer at 12:39 AM : Oct 12, 2007
Oh Jesus, please, enough with the ridiculous Bible, it has no place in politics, please, stop, I can''t take the idiocy anymore . . . - Reply to this comment
- Huck needs to read the Bible about foreign entanglements. Huck needs to humble himself and get out of the race. He needs to endorse Ron Paul. Ron Paul''s positions about the FED, the IRS, and the Iraq war are biblical. Huck has failed to simply read and believe the Bible and the Constitution. Vote Ron Paul for President.
- Reply to this comment
- Bill Clinton was on the Jon Stewart show last month joking about slitting his throat (Where was the outrage over this? I guess Bill gets a pass)
Posted by Dale_Fitz at 06:49 PM : Oct 11, 2007
So, what''s your point, Dale? Two wrongs make a right? Get your head out of your ___ and recognize that this is all BS and red herrings, no matter which side does it. Grow up, America, stop acting like a bunch of cry babies. All the crying about General Betrayus and Rush Limbaugh -- this country deserves exactly what it gets, and Dale is the perfect example of the stupid spoiled little child screaming, "He started it!!!" - Reply to this comment
- Bill Clinton was on the Jon Stewart show last month joking about slitting his throat (Where was the outrage over this? I guess Bill gets a pass)
"No, I may slit my throat," former president Bill Clinton joked last night on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart after being asked how well he might cope with going from leader of the world''s remaining superpower to husband of the first woman president.
story & video:
http://blogs.usatoday.com/onpolitics/2007/09/bill-clinton-jo.html - Reply to this comment
- What''s sad is that folks wear their feelings on their sleeve to be offended at every opportunity.
People need to get over it and lighten up. - Reply to this comment
- I might ad what a truly sad commentary this story is on the American electorate, that we judge our candidates based on comments (or lapel pins) that are absolutely inconsequential and bear no relationship whatsoever to their character or ability to govern. It''s a joke, get over it, move on to something that matters, please.
- Reply to this comment
- Actually, Huckabee is probably the biggest threat to democrats, a republican that actually has a brain. A rare find indeed, and a potential problem for Hillary.
- Reply to this comment





