Leftist Groups' Anti-Bush Ads Could Muddy Kerry's Message
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, April 12, 2004
WASHINGTON Liberal interest groups are running television
ads meant to hurt President Bush and, in effect, help Democrat
rival John Kerry. But some media strategists say such efforts could
backfire by muddying Kerry's message of the moment with the
electorate.
Interest groups can't legally coordinate advertising with
political campaigns. That means their ads could address different
issues than Kerry's commercials, be nastier than his advisers
prefer, clutter the airwaves, stray from obvious themes - the
economy and national security - or politicize issues Kerry would
rather leave alone.
"If I were Kerry's folks, I'd be up nights worrying about
this," said Bill Carrick, a veteran Democrat media consultant.
Bush's re-election campaign is now the main Republican voice on
the air, but it could face the same difficulty when conservative
interest groups start advertising: the inability to ensure that
those commercials don't undermine the campaign's strategy.
Since Bush began advertising in early March, Democrat-leaning
interest groups and Kerry's campaign combined have aired enough
anti-Bush ads to match the president's commercials in some media
markets in battleground states. However, most weeks the groups' ads
have been different in tone, style, topic and images than
Kerry's commercials.
Last week, for example, Kerry's campaign ran an ad that accused
Bush of wanting to send American jobs overseas. At the same time, a
Media Fund commercial criticized Bush's $87 billion reconstruction
plan for Iraq and Afghanistan, and an ad by a MoveOn.org affiliate
claimed Bush used the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, as an
excuse to invade Iraq.
Ideally, media experts say, interest-group ads should carry the
same message at the same time the commercial of their preferred
candidate is running to boost the odds of influencing voters.
"They would be wise to look at a campaign's themes and try to
be consistent about imitating and echoing them without direct
coordination," said William Benoit, a University of
Missouri-Columbia professor who studies political ads.
David Perlmutter, who teaches communications at Louisiana State
University, said not doing so could lead to unintended
consequences, such as diffusing a candidate's message or, worse
yet, inciting the opposition to turn out to vote. "Sometimes you
can be hurt by your friends," he said.
At the same time, Perlmutter added, ads that effectively echo a
candidate's focus in a given week could reinforce it.
Last week, an AFL-CIO ad used statements by jobless workers,
such as "my industry is pretty much gone," to counter Bush's
claim that the economy is "growing stronger." The ad was in 11 of
the 17 states where Kerry was running his jobs commercial.
Some interest groups running ads say they're not concerned that
they are in conflict with Kerry.
"Obviously since we can't talk [to Kerry's campaign], we can't
be absolutely sure of being on the same page. But we're confident
over here that we're on the right track in terms of message," said
Jim Jordan, a Media Fund spokesman.
MoveOn founder Wes Boyd said his group's primary objective was
not to sound the Kerry campaign's lines but to press its members'
concerns about Bush's administration, even if doing so doesn't
help Kerry. "We let the chips fall where they may," Boyd said.
So far, Democrat strategists say there is no evidence that
interest groups have diluted Kerry's message. And, the
U.S. senator's advisers say they aren't concerned about
it. "From what I see, they're raising very relevant issues," said
Stephanie Cutter, a Kerry spokeswoman.
Some media strategists say that no matter what issues
interest-group ads address, they have one thing in common that
could benefit Kerry: They criticize Bush.
"Anything that takes on the president should have the effect of
helping the president's opponent," said Steve McMahon, a
Democrat consultant.
He and other Democrats said the fact that the interest-group ads
cover issues different than Kerry does is proof there is no illegal
coordination, as Republicans allege.
Donna Brazile, who ran Democrat Al Gore's campaign in 2000, said
interest-group ads might affect what's going on now but won't decide
whether Democrats take control of the White House in seven months.
"I do believe it all depends on John Kerry," Brazile said.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Editor's note:
Breaking: The Real Story About John Kerry`s Vietnam Record – Click Here!
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
2004 Elections
DNC
Sen John Kerry