Attack ads hit Republicans who voted for Trumpcare: "How could you do this do us?"
Two dozen vulnerable House Republicans who voted for the American Health Care Act were hit with devastating attack ads on Monday.
The ad asks each member, "How could you do this do us?" after laying out the possible negative consequences of the bill.
One of the members targeted is Rep. Martha McSally (R-Ariz.), whose district voted for Hillary Clinton by a five-point margin in 2016. Read more (5/8/17)
Attack ads. They’ve become a big force in Long Island election campaigns. Several days
ago, a little over a week before Election Day this year, I traveled to southern Maryland for a
family event, turned on the TV in the motel room—and there they were hundreds of miles from
here: political attack ads one after another.
The names of candidates, other than those running for president and vice…
An attack ad was in the mail before the hurricane hit, comparing her to a Category Five storm, but text messages sent afterward also included the imagery
Now why would the GOP attack someone that got an AWARD from climate-change denier Gov. Ron Desantis?
Trevor highlights the onslaught of vicious and deceptive attack ads aimed at Georgia governor hopeful Stacey Abrams and other political candidates as the 2022 midterm elections approach.
As anonymous ads flood the small town with disinformation, candidates feel helpless.
The ads paste unflattering photographs of the councillors over text or videos that hurl insults. Posts claim councillors — dubbed “Team Karen” — are “reckless,” “self-interested” “flip flop politicians” who “do not want your family to own a car.”
Many of the ads claim that councillors are in the pockets of developers without offering proof.
A number of ads published last October, which cost upwards of $2,000, accused council of spending $220,000 of municipal taxpayer’s money for three gazebos. In fact the money came from the province.
Postcards making the same false claims were distributed to households across the region.
The district labelled those gazebo claims “misinformation” and released a statement correcting details within the ads.