Rain
64°
Crystal Lake, IL
Rain|Forecast »

Senate race ads focus on Medicare, Obamacare, debt

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

"They had such great personalities and I started scratching my head and pulled our media guy aside and I said, "Don't these two represent what we've been trying to say all along? They are a visual for what we've been trying to say: Tester and Obama are twins," said Erik Iverson, Rehberg's campaign manager.

The Rehberg camp wrote a script within the hour and cut the ad that afternoon. It spent more than $100,000 to air the ads during the Republican and Democratic conventions. The more Montana voters associate Tester with Obama, the more likely he is to lose because of the president's low favorability ratings. The ads' effectiveness, Iverson said, is evident in campaign's internal polling. In February, only 1 of 5 voters surveyed by the campaign answered that Tester voted with Obama's position more than 90 percent of the time. Now, more than half do. Rehberg wins handily with that group of voters.

To have any chance of winning, it's critical for Democratic candidates in those conservative states to display their independence.

In Indiana, Democrat Joe Donnelly explains in an ad that he would work across party lines to extend all the income tax cuts passed under President George W. Bush, even those for the wealthy. He's incorporated a theme within his political ads, casting his opponent, Richard Mourdock, as an ultra-conservative ideologue who doesn't compromise. His ads end with a man named "The Mourdock Way" yelling out obnoxiously "Hey, Donnelly, it's my way or the highway,"

Donnelly's campaign spokeswoman, Elizabeth Shappell, said internal polling shows that "highway" now stands out as one of the most frequently cited words that voters associate with Mourdock, who defeated Sen. Richard Lugar in the primary by rallying the tea party to his camp.

Mourdock has responded with an ad of his own called "teammate."

"Richard's a great teammate and he'll work with Republicans and Democrats to create jobs," Lt. Gov. Becky Skillman says in the ad.

The health care overhaul that Congress passed in 2010 continues to reverberate in this year's elections. GOP candidates say it represents government overreach and they're working to counter Democratic charges that Republicans are out to eliminate Medicare.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Reader Poll

Do you feel you are saving enough for retirement?

Yes
No
Already retired