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Laura Bush requests to be removed from same-sex marriage ad

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(CNN) — Former first lady Laura Bush, who is one of three prominent Republicans featured in a new ad supporting same-sex marriage, has asked the spot’s creator to remove a clip of her espousing support for equal marriage rights.

“Mrs. Bush did not approve of her inclusion in this advertisement nor is she associated in any way with the group that made the ad,” Anne MacDonald, a spokeswoman for the former first lady, wrote in a statement Thursday. “When she became aware of the advertisement Tuesday night, we requested that the group remove her from it.”

The ad, from the Respect for Marriage Coalition, features Bush speaking in a 2010 CNN interview with Larry King.

“When couples are committed to each other and love each other then they ought to have the same sort of rights that everyone has,” she is shown saying.

Those remarks came as a surprise at the time, since she appeared to be breaking ranks on the issue with her husband, former President George W. Bush. In 2011, her daughter Barbara appeared in a television spot for another pro-gay marriage group, the Human Rights Campaign.

The spot also features clips of former Vice President Dick Cheney and former Secretary of State Colin Powell voicing their support for same-sex marriage rights. Spokesmen for Cheney and Powell did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the ad Thursday morning. The Respect for Marriage Coalition similarly did not respond to a query on whether they would remove Bush from their spot.

The group said Wednesday they would spend $1 million to air the spot nationally, as well as run print ads in major newspapers utilizing the same quotes from the Republicans who back equal marriage rights.

“None of us would want to be told we can’t marry the person we love,” a narrator says introducing the clips. “That’s why a growing majority of Americans believe it’s time to allow marriage for gay and lesbian couples.”

The ad shows Colin Powell, the former Secretary of State under George W. Bush, supporting same-sex marriage in an interview with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer from May.

“Allowing them to live together with the protection of law, it seems to me is the way we should be moving in this country,” Powell said on CNN’s “The Situation Room.”

That interview reflected a shift for Powell, who was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff when the military’s Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy was implemented.

A third Republican, former Vice President Dick Cheney, is shown in the spot saying “Freedom means freedom for everyone.” Cheney’s younger daughter Mary wed her longtime partner Heather Poe in June. They were married in Washington, D.C., which legalized same-sex marriage in 2009.

And a Democrat, President Barack Obama, is shown during his January inauguration address declaring “Our journey is not complete until our gay brothers and sisters are treated like anyone else under the law.”

The new ad campaign comes as the Supreme Court prepares to tackle the issue of same-sex marriage this spring. Last year the high court agreed to hear two constitutional challenges to state and federal laws dealing with the recognition of gay and lesbian couples to legally wed.

Oral arguments will be held on March 26 and 27, with a ruling by late June.

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