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Bush previously claimed that ads from her 2020 opponent, former Rep. William Lacy Clay, who is also Black, darkened her skin. In 2022, a firm working for New York Rep. Jamaal Bowman’s (D ...
The ad was produced by political consultant Roger Ailes with help from Bush campaign manager Lee Atwater, and first aired on October 5, 1988. "Revolving door syndrome" is a term used in criminology to refer to recidivism; however, in the ad, the implication is that prison sentences were of an inconsequential length.
Beginning on September 21, 1988, the Americans for Bush arm of the National Security Political Action Committee (NSPAC), under the auspices of Floyd Brown, began running a campaign ad entitled "Weekend Passes," using the Horton case to attack Dukakis. The ad was produced by media consultant Larry McCarthy, who had previously worked for Roger Ailes.
Early on in the campaign, Buchanan's campaign ads attacked Bush for his broken "Read my lips: no new taxes" promise from the 1988 election; following his unexpectedly strong showing in the New Hampshire primary, he also began targeting Bush on social issues, billing himself as the candidate of social conservatives in campaign ads aired before ...
The ad appears to be a rebuttal to a Trump-supprting super PAC’s attack against Mr DeSantis
In that year's Iowa caucus, held on February 8, 1988, Bush finished in third, behind winner Dole and runner-up Robertson. Bush's support then began to deteriorate, partly because former Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. had recently endorsed Dole. The Bush campaign then decided to produce an attack ad against Dole. Ailes got the idea to ...
Here's everything we know about the latest attack ad against the former president's potential challenger in the 2024 Republican primary, and the pudding story that inspired it.
Studies claim that 82% of Americans dislike attack ads, and 53% believe that the "ethics and values" of election campaigns have worsened since 1985. [27] The voting public see attack ads as an element of smear campaigning. [28] Other research indicates that voters are open to candidates attacking each other if the issues in question are ...