Wednesday, August 1, 2012
4:22 PM
Thompson goes after Hovde, Club for Growth knocks them both
Tommy Thompson has a new TV ad that goes after Eric Hovde, while the Club for Growth has a new spot out that knocks both of them.
The Thompson TV ad is similar to a radio spot he released last week that questions Hovde's conservative credentials because the hedge fund manager and community banker gave a donation to former Gov. Jim Doyle.
The 30-second TV ad notes that Hovde gave $500 to Doyle's campaign "against Scott Walker" in 2005.
It plays audio of Hovde saying he was probably "strong armed" by Doyle and that he "capitulated."
"Hovde admits he capitulated to liberal Jim Doyle to protect his real estate deals," a narrator says. "Tommy Thompson stood up to liberals like Jim Doyle his whole career. Hovde capitulated. That's a risk we can't afford."
The national Club for Growth spot asks, Who will bring real conservative change to Washington?
The spot features a cube with pictures on all sides that rotates as the narrator says Thompson did some good things ago. One side of the cube shows an old black-and-white picture of Thompson.
But he pushed for nine different tax hikes and said we cant repeal Obamacare, the narrator says.
The spot then turns to Hovde, who the narrator says supported a Wall Street bailout and Obamas high-speed rail stimulus spending.
That wont change Washington, the narrator says.
The spot concludes by praising Mark Neumann as Wisconsins most conservative congressman in decades. Neumanns the choice for conservative change.
-- By JR Ross
Thursday, August 2, 2012
5:46 PM
Americans for Job Security goes after Hovde on TV
A new TV ad from Americans for Job Security attacks Hovde, alleging his actions in the private sector clash with his claim that he's a conservative.
The 30-second ad, entitled "Says and Does," begins with a chart and two pictures of Hovde. The two sides are labeled "Says" and "Does."
"He says he was against bank bailouts, but invested in banks that got billions," The narrator says. "Says he's fine paying higher taxes, but was sued for tax evasion. Says he's from the private sector, but his business was built on government-assisted transactions and took millions in stimulus cash."
The ad ends with the narrator saying "Eric Hovde: Sound like a conservative to you?"
-- By Jason Smathers
They are all over the place with their endorsements, pushed a perennial candidate from outside the district in the NC-8 race, got him into the runoff where he predictably failed.
Hit, miss, hit, miss, miss, no rhyme or reason behind it.