by
Walter Brasch
Pennsylvania,
which had been a no-contest state in presidential primaries because of its late
balloting, is a now a swing state with less than a week until the election.
Just about every voter by now has received dozens of robocalls, e-mails,
letters, postcards, and exposure to almost-uncountable TV, digital, satellite,
and social media ads. Most are attack ads, with similar messages.
The ads focus
upon homeland security, taxes, immigration, pro-life/pro-choice, and bringing
jobs back to America. The conservatives have thrown in the phrase “liberal
extremists” in many of their ads in an effort to shock all America to believe
that liberals are somehow tied to Muslim extremists. The liberals are pushing
an agenda that defines the conservatives as greedy plutocrats who have little
thought for the middle class. This election, from local offices to the
presidency may be the dirtiest since 1800 when Thomas Jefferson challenged John
Adams.
Donald Trump,
who has outsourced much of his clothing line and construction materials, now
says if president he will bring jobs back to America, stop illegal immigration,
defeat Isis, repeal Obamacare, lower taxes for families while miraculously
raising the budget for defense, and perform myriad miracle acts that are not
part of a president’s constitutional responsibility.
On his march to
the presidency, Trump has focused upon Hillary Clinton’s e-mails, a scandal
that isn’t one. Congressional hearings and the FBI have cleared her;
innumerable times, Trump has continued to attack her. Clinton has already
apologized for using a personal e-mail server during her four years as
secretary of state. What turned up among more than 30,000 e-mails is about 55 e-mails
that received a “confidential” tag, the lowest of three classifications, with
another 55 receiving “secret” or “top secret” classification. As a cabinet
officer, and fourth in line of succession, she had the right to classify any
message. A few of the messages came from other agencies. About 2,100 messages
were classified retroactively.
Clinton, still
ahead in numerous polls, has attacked Trump for his crude behavior. One of her
TV ads, which penetrates
almost every TV
show, is a fast-paced collage of his many comments; among them, Trump mocks a
disabled reporter, uses obscene language, and treats women as chattel.
Both candidates
call each other unfit to be president, with Clinton asking voters if they
really want Trump to be the person in charge of unleashing the nuclear arsenal,
and Trump asking voters if they want a corrupt liar in the White House. Trump
has also played upon Clinton’s 30 years of public service, linking her as an
insider and him as an outsider to Washington, D.C. politics. The “outsider”
label has been resonating with voters at all levels of the election campaigns
as voters believe they are outsiders, alienated to government, and are willing
to be led by insiders who claim to be outsiders.
The cost of
airing ads by both candidates for the presidency and members of Congress is
more than $4 billion, and that doesn’t include the cost of producing them. More
than $600 million, spread among all major Democratic and Republican candidates
for the presidency, has been spent on broadcast TV ads, according to Borrell
Associates. During the past 21 weeks,
Clinton has spent about $211 million on broadcast TV ads; Trump has spent about
$74 million, according to data compiled by BloombergPolitics. However, Trump
has used both Twitter and free TV time, due to outrageous statements, to equal
Clinton’s campaign. During the final week prior to the election, Trump will
spend $25 million in broadcast TV ads. Clinton and Trump have each secured $5
million in ad time for Pennsylvania TV stations during the final week. The
Trump totals don’t include a $3 million TV ad buy from the NRA, which stokes
the fire of fear that Clinton, if elected president, will violate the Second
Amendment and take guns away from civilians.
By Tuesday’s
election, it will be doubtful that either Clinton or Trump will know how many
ads were placed by their campaigns or by SuperPACs on their behalf that aired
on broadcast television.
In the race for
senate from Pennsylvania, Sen. Pat Toomey and Katie McGinty have each attacked
the other for being millionaires.
With McGinty it’s
a case of benefitting from going from business to government, where she was the
Department of Environment Protection administrator, back to the energy
business, back to government where she was Gov. Tom Wolf’s chief of staff, and
then to membership on the boards of energy firms she had previously regulated.
Toomey also attacked her for tossing about $2.8 million of state funds to two
non-profit organizations that her husband is an advisor.
With Toomey,
the attacks are because he was a stock broker who went into politics, favors Wall
Street, and owned a bank that foreclosed on numerous customers. McGinty’s ads
stress her blue-collar family of 12, emphasizing that her mother was a
restaurant hostess and her father was a police officer.
The two
candidates’ campaign committees and their SuperPACs have spent more than $55
million to be elected to the Senate, according to the Center for Responsive
Politics; it’s a job that pays $174,000 a year.
There is one
reality in all the advertising— negative ads generally don’t work, and exist
only to reinforce a candidate’s base of support.
[Dr. Brasch,
who has covered politics and government for four decades, is author of Fracking America: Sacrificing Health and the
Environment for Short-Term Economic Benefit.]
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