Democratic-linked groups mount ad offensive
Slide show |
more photos |
VoteVets said it has a limited budget and chooses those members of Congress that it thinks are most likely to peel away from supporting Bush if some pressure is applied.
Having done ads targeting Collins, Coleman and Walsh, will Gens. Batiste and Eaton campaign next year to defeat them?
“I don't know who they support or don't support in elections,” Soltz said. “I haven't asked. All I know is that Batiste and Eaton are both Republicans and voted for George Bush and are very disappointed by his performance and think Congress has to step in here.”
The VoteVets advisory board includes Democratic National Committee member and former Al Gore adviser Elaine Kamarck and Tammy Duckworth, a Democratic House candidate in Illinois last year.
The ad campaign is being paid for by the VoteVets 501(c)(4), but the group also has a political action committee, which in last year’s election targeted Republicans, spending, for example, $45,000 to defeat Sen. George Allen of Virginia.
So far in the 2007-08 election cycle, Democratic-linked 501(c)(4) groups are playing a far more prominent role than Republican-affiliated groups.
GOP ad with nuclear blast
One GOP-linked group called Move America Forward has been running TV ads that end with footage of a nuclear explosion as the narrator says, “The choice is clear: We win in Iraq … or we face the terrorists here in America.”
The use of 501(c)(4) groups and related tax-exempt groups in campaigns “is not a new phenomenon,” said Republican consultant Patrick Davis. “These types of ‘issue advocacy’ ads were the stock in trade of national party committees before the 2002 campaign finance law outlawed ‘soft money,’” the unlimited funds that used to be legal.
“These activities must be effective given that both left and right donors are willing to invest millions in their execution,” said Davis.
The 501(c)(4) status has an advantage, Woodhouse said, because it “is not tied to a political party. You have a greater sense of credibility when you’re advocating a message.”
He said much of the funding for his group comes from labor unions, including the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees and the Service Employees International Union.
“Contributions will neither be used to support or oppose the election of a clearly identified Federal candidate nor to influence Federal elections,” says the Americans United for Change Web site.
Do the activities of the 501(c)(4) groups allow the DSCC and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee to save their funds for use next year, since, for now, VoteVets and other groups are doing the work of softening up Republican incumbents?
Woodhouse said no.
No impact in 2008
“Almost in no case would the party committees be doing any advertising this far out” in advance of the 2008 elections, he said. “The money we’re spending now is not going to have any impact on the political environment in 2008. People will have long forgotten the ads we ran.”
Yet the targeted Republicans can’t help but feel that the VoteVets ads are simply one element of the Democrats’ campaign.
MORE FROM MSNBC.COM |
Collins said she wasn’t surprised by the ads targeting her. “There is obviously a concerted plan among certain left-wing groups to work together, and everything that had happened from the first wave of ads that were run against me in April to demonstrations to phone calls to my office are all part of the plan that’s being orchestrated.”
She added, “Many people in Maine told me they didn’t like out-of-state groups coming in with attack ads.”
Coleman, who returned from a trip to Iraq three weeks ago, said, “I got a loud and clear message from folks on the ground in Iraq: Don’t cut off our funding. We shouldn’t put the troops in the middle of political cross-fire. Of course, I think this ad does that — I think they’re playing politics with it.… Perhaps it’ll backfire.”
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
- Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM POLITICS |
| Add Politics headlines to your news reader: |



