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| CAMPAIGN AD WARS | |
June 2, 2004 | |
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Well ahead of the national conventions, the campaigns of Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, and President George W. Bush have already saturated the airwaves and Internet alike with political advertising. Terence Smith speaks with Brooks Jackson, director of FactCheck.org of the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania, about the ads and the veracity of claims from the Bush and Kerry campaigns. The NewsHour Media Unit is funded by grants from the Pew Charitable Trusts and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. |
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With six months still to go before the election, the two campaigns have already spent more than $100 million on television advertising. Here with me to discuss the factual accuracy of those ads is Brooks Jackson, director of FactCheck.org, a project of the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania. Brooks, welcome. $100 million by this stage of the campaign. Is that a record? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Record spending on advertising | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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BROOKS JACKSON: Absolutely. We've never seen anything like this. What's happening
is the donation limits have gone up under McCain-Feingold from $1,000 to $2,000
per donor, so there's more money available to the candidates.
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| Analysis of Kerry and Bush campaign ads | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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TERENCE SMITH: All right. Let's talk about some of the ads that are and have been
running across the country in different markets. The first is a Kerry ad that
began airing in 20 markets today. SEN. JOHN KERRY (Ad): We are a country of the future. We're a country of optimists. We're the can-do people. KERRY
AD SPOKESMAN: For John Kerry, a stronger America begins at home. Real plans to
create jobs here, not overseas; lower SEN. JOHN KERRY (Ad): I'm John Kerry and I approved this message. TERENCE SMITH: Well, that ad is pretty general, but there was a line in there that caught my ear, anyway, which is his plan to create independence from Middle East oil. Does he have such a plan? BROOKS JACKSON: That's right. Well, he does. It's on his Web site. And if you look at it carefully, it involves such things as increasing use of hydrogen vehicles by the year 2020. Well, that's pretty much the same thing that George Bush is calling for, and it is probably not a practical plan. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology had a report out last year saying that diesel cars and hybrid vehicles are a better bet for the foreseeable future to combat global warming. They're just not going to be practical anytime soon. TERENCE SMITH: So this might even be a little too optimistic? BROOKS JACKSON: Well, it's kind of a cream puff of an ad, really. There's not many facts... factual claims made in it. TERENCE SMITH: All right. Let's take a look now at a Bush campaign ad that began airing last week and is still on the air. It's called "Patriot Act." PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH (Ad): I'm George W. Bush and I approved this message.
TERENCE SMITH: All right, what catches your eye and ear in that? BROOKS JACKSON: Well, first of all, it is simply not true that John Kerry is calling for repealing wiretap authority against terrorists.
TERENCE SMITH: And there's a big difference. Now let's look... here's the last half of actually a one-minute Kerry ad we've edited to the second half to be fair here. It's essentially a biography ad. It's called "Lifetime." KERRY
AD SPOKESMAN: For more than 30 years, John Kerry has served America. He broke with his own party to support a balanced budget; then, in the 1990s, cast the decisive vote that created 20 million new jobs. A lifetime of service and strength. John Kerry for president. SEN. JOHN KERRY (Ad): I'm John Kerry and I approved this message. TERENCE SMITH: A decisive vote to create 20 million new jobs? BROOKS JACKSON: Of course, this is one of those classic biographical ads to make John Kerry look good, and he just couldn't resist going a little over the line. What he's talking about there is a vote for Bill Clinton's 1993 deficit reduction package, mostly tax increases. It did pass by a single vote, so every senator who voted for it, I suppose, cast a decisive vote.
TERENCE SMITH: So every vote that was for it was decisive. BROOKS JACKSON: Exactly, and it wasn't just John Kerry or that package that created 20 million new jobs. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Factual accuracy of commercials | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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TERENCE SMITH: All right, here's another ad. This Bush campaign ad is entitled "Troubling," and it raises a number of allegations and questions about John Kerry. PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH (Ad): I'm George W. Bush and I approved this message. BUSH AD SPOKESMAN: John Kerry's record on the economy? Troubling.
TERENCE SMITH: So, have you looked at these numbers? BROOKS JACKSON: Oh, yes. TERENCE SMITH: $90 billion, et cetera. BROOKS JACKSON: Absolutely. Absolutely. It says John Kerry voted for higher taxes 350 times. They have a list of more than 350 votes. If you look carefully at them, some of those votes... most of them are to keep taxes the same. When he voted against a proposed tax cut, some of them are for lower taxes, if he voted for a Democratic alternative to a larger Republican tax cut.
That's false, leaves a false implication. The gas tax? It's true, ten years ago Kerry said in a newspaper interview that he had supported a 50-cent a gallon gas increase, that he didn't get enough credit as a deficit hawk, and he should be given credit for that. But he never sponsored a bill to do that, never voted for it, doesn't support it now and yet other commercials from Bush says Kerry has plan the raise gas tax 50 cents a gallon. And it's just not true. TERENCE SMITH: Okay. Here's a Kerry ad that is entitled "Ten Million Jobs." Let's look at it. KERRY AD SPOKESMAN: While jobs are leaving our country in record numbers, George Bush says sending jobs overseas makes sense for America. His top economic advisers say moving American jobs to low-cost countries is a plus for the U.S.
SEN. JOHN KERRY (Ad): I'm John Kerry and I approved this message. TERENCE SMITH: All right, Brooks. BROOKS JACKSON: Well, where that one goes too far is saying Bush says it makes sense to send jobs overseas. George Bush never said that. His chief economist said that in a very voluminous report that, my guess is, the president never even read. But it just... they would have been all right if they said the Bush administration says that it makes sense to send jobs overseas. That was an economic argument in favor of fair trade and something no sensible politician would be saying in an election year. But it's just wrong to put those words in the president's mouth. TERENCE SMITH: Okay. Finally, this Bush ad is entitled "Wacky." BROOKS JACKSON: Oh, yes. PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH (Ad): I'm George W. Bush and I approved this message. BUSH AD SPOKESMAN: Some people have wacky ideas, like taxing gasoline more so people drive less. That's John Kerry. He supported the 50-cent a gallon gas tax. If Kerry's gas tax increase were law, the average family would pay $657 more a year. Raising taxes is a habit of Kerry's. He supported higher gasoline taxes 11 times. Maybe John Kerry just doesn't understand what his ideas mean to the rest of us. TERENCE SMITH: So, as you said before, that's taking a ten-year-old proposal and then applying today numbers to it. BROOKS JACKSON: And casting it in the present tense, "Kerry's plan." And they even have a little calculator on their Web site you can figure out how much it's going to cost you, depending on how much you drive. Well, it's just silly and it's wrong. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| The influence of advertising on voters | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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TERENCE SMITH: Finally, what's the impact of this advertising? Is there polling
or surveys done to determine whether people believe what they see and hear? BROOKS JACKSON: Well, alarmingly, yes. The Annenberg Center conducts an enormous poll during elections, the National Annenberg Election Survey, and we took a look at this, surveying in those battleground states and also other states. And what we're finding is that people tend to get... even people who say they don't learn much from ads -- they, of course, aren't going to be influenced by those -- a large number of people actually have some of this false information stuck in their brains as being true or probably true. And those numbers are higher by four, five, six, seven percentage points in the battleground states where these ads are running than they are in other states where people are just picking up these things from the general campaign rhetoric. TERENCE SMITH: And is there anyway to estimate or analyze how these ads impact the relative standing of the two candidates in the polls? BROOKS JACKSON: Well, it's... we have some information, again, from the Annenberg survey. What we've found is that during the period when these ads have been running heavily, those..
What we've found, though, is that Bush's favorable ratings have gone down and Kerry's have gone up during the period these ads are running. So it looks like Bush's ads may be back-firing. TERENCE SMITH: Okay. Brooks Jackson, FactCheck.org. Thank you very much. BROOKS JACKSON: My pleasure, Terry. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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