Miami Herald

Anti-Trump GOP group runs Spanish-language ads in Miami

- BY ALEX DAUGHERTY adaugherty@mcclatchyd­c.com

WASHINGTON

A group of political operatives with ties to former Republican Florida Gov. Jeb Bush pledged a month ago to “surgically target” small groups of voters around the state to help Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden.

Part of that strategy includes running TV ads focused on reaching Latino voters in Miami-Dade.

Republican Voters

Against Trump, an antiDonald Trump super PAC, will begin airing a TV ad on Tuesday in Spanish that compares the president to Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, Russian President Vladimir Putin and former Cuban leader Fidel Castro.

“Dictators. Communists. Enemies of freedom and America, but friends of Donald Trump,” the ad says, while playing images of violence in Venezuela and Trump’s meeting with Kim Jong Un. “Remember, dictators lie to you first and then ruin lives to get whatever they want.”

The strategy of trying to draw parallels between Trump and authoritar­ian leaders is one that the Republican­s have also attempted against Democrats.

The anti-Trump ad being released this week includes side-by-side images of Trump standing beside

Putin at the 2019 G20 summit in Japan and Castro standing beside former Soviet Union leader Nikita Khrushchev during the Cuban Missile Crisis.

The minute-long spot will run for the next week in the Miami market, and additional ads could run in the coming weeks. Republican Voters Against Trump has pledged to spend $8 million to $10 million on TV, social media, and digital ads.

Trump and his campaign have also invested in Spanish-language ads in Florida, as polls show the president performing better with Latino voters in 2020 compared to 2016. The Trump campaign’s biggest Spanish-language ad buy in Florida touts the economy and accuses Biden of wanting to raise taxes.

Trump has also courted Miami-Dade County’s Latino vote with in-person events. Biden hasn’t visited South Florida since September 2019. He suspended in-person campaign events due to the coronaviru­s from March until September 2020. He visited Tampa and Orlando this month where he conducted a Hispanic heritage month event aimed at Latino voters.

Latinos in Miami-Dade, where Cubans are the majority, tend to lean Republican more than Latinos in other parts of the state. A poll of Miami-Dade voters conducted earlier this month had Trump and Biden splitting the Latino vote in Florida’s most populous county, even though Hillary Clinton won the Latino vote in Florida by a large margin four years ago.

The Tampa media market, which also has a large Latino population but not as large as South Florida’s, was the Trump campaign’s biggest recipient of advertisin­g dollars in the country last week, according to Advertisin­g Analytics, an ad tracking firm.

Trump spent $1.7 million in the Tampa market from Sept. 19-25, though the Biden campaign is currently outspendin­g Trump nationwide, $42.2 million to

$17.5 million in the past week. The Biden campaign is also slightly outspendin­g Trump in Florida —

$63.7 million to $57.5 million — from July to midSeptemb­er.

Including outside spending, the 2020 race in Florida has already led to more than $200 million in political advertisin­g.

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