Tory MP wants 'Christ'back in holidays

A New Brunswick Tory MP is challenging Ottawa to put the "Christ" back into Christmas.

Greg Thompson, the veteran MP for New Brunswick Southwest, has launched a one-man campaign aimed at stemming what he fears is the federal government's increasing efforts to separate state and religion.

The final straw is a new Royal Canadian Mint television advertising campaign that substitutes "giving" in place of "Christmas" in the song The Twelve Days of Christmas.

"There's been a move by government here to sanitize everything that happens in Ottawa," Mr. Thompson charged in an interview Thursday.

"It's as if they don't want to risk offending anyone, and in the process they are forgetting the fact that Christmas Day is a recognized holiday. I mean, what's next?' "

Mr. Thompson is so concerned by what he terms "an erosion of Christian values" that he's submitted a series of eight questions on the Order Paper in the House of Commons to find out who is responsible for the Grinch-like behaviour.

The questions have, in turn, sparked a minor controversy after a clerk ruled three of his questions were hypothetical and inflammatory. Mr. Thompson successfully appealed to House Speaker Peter Milliken to get two of the questions reinstated, but Mr. Milliken declared it was "argumentative" to ask "whose decision was it to take the 'Christ' out of 'Christmas.' "

Mr. Thompson said two out of three isn't bad, but he's refusing to give up as he claims to have unprecedented support from MPs of all political stripes.

"Of all the things I've ever done up here I've never seen Members of Parliament rally around one issue more than they have on this one, personally," Mr. Thompson said.

"I think it's something we're all concerned about, but sometimes we don't like to speak out," he added. "We're reluctant to say anything until we decide 'enough is enough.' "

A mint spokesman acknowledged Thursday there has been a backlash to the Christmas campaign, but Phil Taylor added the television ad has also been "extremely effective" in selling coins.

He said the mint's four-year-old strategy is to promote December as a time of gift giving for many groups and the ad was designed to appeal to a wide audience.

"A lot of people think it was done out of political correctness, but it is based purely on marketing principles," Mr. Taylor said.

"It promotes coins as an ideal gift and it targets gift givers regardless of their creed," he added.

Mr. Thompson said that isn't good enough as he submitted a new question Thursday asking what the federal government is doing to promote Dec. 25 as the birth date of Jesus Christ.

"We're trying to put the Christ back into Christmas," he said.

Mr. Thompson's first list of questions also asked who approved the mint's campaign, and whether Canada Post might next be dropping its Christmas postage stamps.

He's also asking if Ottawa is going to amend its Holidays Act and certain Standing Orders to remove the word "Christmas," and he is demanding to know what other steps the government has taken to eliminate references to Christmas.

Mr. Thompson said "this antiseptic approach to government" has been going on for more than a year. He noted that a vigil on Parliament Hill last year following the 9-11 terrorist attacks was void of any reference to God, as was a recent Swissair memorial.

The city of Toronto, meanwhile, has recently dubbed its giant evergreen the "holiday tree," and The Gap clothing store has instructed its sales staff to wish customers a "happy holiday" instead of "merry Christmas."

"When do you nip this sort of political correctness in the bud," Mr. Thompson said.

"I really think the government has gone overboard, or appears to be on that track," he added.

He argued that Christmas is the one time of the year when the generosity of humankind is expressed on the streets with peoples of all faiths being greeted with a "merry Christmas."

"There's something wrong when the federal government is trying to minimize that," Mr. Thompson said.