The Mercury News

Bush supporters to spend $10M

TV time purchases made in earliest votingmark­ets

- By Thomas Beaumont

DES MOINES, Iowa — The heavily funded superPAC backing Republican Jeb Bush will spend at least $10 million on television time in the earliest voting presidenti­al primary states, the first salvo in a massive TV ad campaign to support the former Florida governor’s bid for the Republican nomination.

Officials with Right to Rise USA say they will buy time in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina TV markets and on cable television in the three states. Ads are scheduled to begin in Iowa and New Hampshire on Sept. 15, in South Carolina a week later and then run continuous­ly through the end of the year.

The plan, shared by the group with The Associated Press before Monday’s buy, is the first evidence of Right to Rise USA’s major strategic spending of the roughly $100 million it had on hand last month. It’s also the first major move by the group, which was developed by longtime Bush adviser and California ad maker Mike Murphy, to run alongside Bush’s own campaign organizati­on, which is bound by federal fundraisin­g limits.

“We believe Jeb Bush has the strongest record of conservati­ve accomplish­ments in the race, and we plan to tell that story,” Paul Lindsay, communicat­ion director for Right to Rise USA, told The Associated Press.

The first ads will be positive spots promoting Bush in a field that includes 16 other major GOP candidates. They will resemble videos on the group’s website, promoting Bush and his accomplish­ments as Florida governor from 1999 to 2007. One piece was taken from clips of Bush from the Aug. 6 Republican debate in Cleveland, Lindsay said.

That does not mean the group’s ads won’t turn to criticizin­g Republican rivals once the first contests draw near. The group has already aired one online ad that points to Bush’s release of decades of tax returns and publicatio­n of thousands of emails sent during his time as governor, to draw comparison­s with Democratic front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton, who recently turned over her private email server to the FBI under pressure.

To date, the group, based in Southern California, has spent roughly $200,000 on online advertisin­g.

The new expenditur­e, which Lindsay described as an “eight-figure” buy, is significan­t because it’s the first big expense for the group that Bush helped raise more than $103 million to finance, and which is expected to perform other campaign functions in support of the former governor.

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