27.10.06

GOP goes negative

Man skal ikke være nogen ekspert i politisk teori eller statistik for at se at Republikanerne er i enorme problemer her to uger inden midtvejsvalget. Derfor har de rullet alt skidt ud de kan finde på deres Demokratiske modstandere i et forsøg på at redde det tabte hjem.
Ifølge Washington Post bruger Republikanerne mere end 90 % af deres reklamebudget på negative reklamer.

Avisen har samlet nogle eksempler på negative reklamer der godt kan virke en anelse - overdrevne.

- In New York, the NRCC ran an ad accusing Democratic House candidate Michael A. Arcuri, a district attorney, of using taxpayer dollars for phone sex. "Hi, sexy," a dancing woman purrs. "You've reached the live, one-on-one fantasy line." It turns out that one of Arcuri's aides had tried to call the state Division of Criminal Justice, which had a number that was almost identical to that of a porn line. The misdial cost taxpayers $1.25.

· In Ohio, GOP gubernatorial candidate J. Kenneth Blackwell, trailing by more than 20 points in polls, has accused front-running Democratic Rep. Ted Strickland of protecting a former aide who was convicted in 1994 on a misdemeanor indecency charge. Blackwell's campaign is also warning voters through suggestive "push polls" that Strickland failed to support a resolution condemning sex between adults and children. Strickland, a psychiatrist, objected to a line suggesting that sexually abused children cannot have healthy relationships when they grow up.

· The Republican Party of Wisconsin distributed a mailing linking Democratic House candidate Steve Kagen to a convicted serial killer and child rapist. The supposed connection: The "bloodthirsty" attorney for the killer had also done legal work for Kagen.

· In two dozen congressional districts, a political action committee supported by a white Indianapolis businessman, J. Patrick Rooney, is running ads saying Democrats want to abort black babies. A voice says, "If you make a little mistake with one of your hos, you'll want to dispose of that problem tout de suite, no questions asked."

· In the most controversial recent ad, the Republican National Committee slammed Rep. Harold E. Ford Jr. (D-Tenn.) for attending a Playboy-sponsored Super Bowl party. In the ad, a scantily clad white actress winks as she reminisces about good times with Ford, who is black. That ad has been pulled, but the RNC has a new one saying Ford "wants to give the abortion pill to schoolchildren."

Men Demokraterne, der ellers mest er fokuseret på at linke de enkelte kandidater sammen med enten Præsident Bush eller Jack Abramoff, kan også lave den slags angreb der gør amerikansk politik til noget ganske særligt:

- House candidate Chris Carney is running ads slamming the "family values" of Rep. Don Sherwood (R-Pa.), whose former mistress accused him of choking her. And House candidate Kirsten Gillibrand has an ad online ridiculing Rep. John E. Sweeney (R-N.Y.) for attending a late-night fraternity party. "What's a 50-year-old man doing at a frat party anyway?" one young woman asks, as a faux Sweeney boogies behind her to the Beastie Boys. "Totally creeping me out!" another responds.

God valgkamp!

2 kommentarer:

Anonym sagde ...

Skuffende at David Garby trætter læserne med engelske afskrifter ligesom hans "konkurent" Ronnie. Gå dog tilbage til ordentlige danske forklaringer på den amerikanske politiks mysterier.

DanskPol sagde ...

Jeg synes ellers ikke at jeg er slem til at bare kopiere artikler. Af de sidste 20 posts er det kun to der primært er på engelsk.
Så der er vist rig mulighed for at får forklaret mysteriet - og stille spørgsmål hvis man er faret vild i labyrinten.