USA TODAY US Edition

Left in lurch in Ohio? National Dems shift tactic in Senate race

Planned ad blitz aimed at boosting former governor is delayed

- Deirdre Shesgreen

Two major Democratic money spigots are slowing their advertisin­g flow in Ohio aimed at boosting Ted Strickland’s bid to oust GOP Sen. Rob Portman.

Strickland and his Democratic allies downplayed the developmen­ts. But others will surely read the ad delays as a retrenchme­nt of Democratic support for Strickland, who has been outraised and outmaneuve­red by Portman.

The Senate Majority PAC, a super PAC devoted to electing Democrats to the Senate, canceled TV airtime it had reserved in key Ohio markets for next Tuesday through Sept. 16 — a key moment in the campaign, as many voters tune in to the election after Labor Day. A spokesman for the super PAC said the group will now begin ads two weeks later, on Sept. 20.

“We regularly adjust strategy to maximize our resources and make sure we’re in the best possible position to win back the majority this November,” said Shripal Shah, the Senate Majority PAC’s spokesman.

The super PAC’s decision comes as the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee decided to delay, by one week, its plan to spend as much as $10 million on the Ohio race. As first reported by The

Washington Post, the DSCC ad campaign was slated to start on Sept. 13, but the first week of ads has been canceled.

David Bergstein, a spokesman for Strickland’s campaign, said the DSCC’s independen­t expenditur­es were replaced — not canceled — by a more direct and immediate infusion. The national committee is helping to foot the bill now for a pro-Strickland ad that went on the air last week. It ties Portman to GOP presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump and highlights their shared opposition to abortion rights, among other issues.

“The DSCC is spending the same amount of money they were slated to spend, it’s just being used to help fund our existing ad instead of through an independen­t expenditur­e,” Bergstein said.

A spokeswoma­n for the DSCC suggested the move was a timing shift, not a tactical retreat. “We’re proud to support Ted’s campaign in a variety of ways, including with the ad buy we are funding right now featuring an ad with important informatio­n about Trump and Portman and their dangerous positions on women’s health,” said DSCC spokeswoma­n Sadie Weiner.

Portman has overtaken Strickland in the polls, although the race is still close and could be heavily shaped by the presidenti­al contest.

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