USA TODAY US Edition

Kavanaugh battle leads to barrage of 16,200 ads

Pressure increases in bid to sway senators’ votes

- Eliza Collins and Fredreka Schouten

WASHINGTON – Groups trying to sway the Senate’s vote on Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh have run more than 16,200 ads clamoring for his confirmati­on or defeat, nearly five times the advertisin­g that confronted Neil Gorsuch, President Donald Trump’s first pick to the high court last year, a USA TODAY analysis of advertisin­g data shows.

The advertisin­g frenzy illustrate­s the intensity of the brawl over his nomination and the shadow it could cast over midterm elections, now less than two months away.

The Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday set a Sept. 20 date for a vote on Kavanaugh’s nomination, following four days of boisterous confirmati­on hearings. Republican­s, who hold a narrow 51

49 majority in the Senate, are racing to confirm Kavanaugh before the high court’s next session begins Oct. 1 and help cement the court’s conservati­ve majority before Election Day.

USA TODAY examined advertisin­g data compiled by Kantar’s Campaign Media Analysis Group, starting July 9, when Trump nominated Kavanaugh, through Sept. 7, the final day of his confirmati­on hearings on Capitol Hill.

Republican­s have run more than

11,300 ads in that time, far surpassing the 4,921 spots from Democrats, the analysis shows. The GOP’s firepower is trained most heavily on Democratic incumbents in West Virginia, North Dakota, Missouri and Indiana, all states that backed Trump by double digits in 2016.

Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, D-N.D., who voted to confirm Gorsuch is the top target in Round 2 of the Supreme Court confirmati­on battle, with more than

3,100 ads running in her state since Kavanaugh’s nomination.

“You’re talking about the seat on the highest court in the land, one that will have long-term implicatio­ns on American policy for decades,” said Brian O. Walsh, the president of the pro-Trump advocacy group America First Policies, which has aired more than 1,500 ads supporting Kavanaugh.

“How do you not try to put everything you can into that effort?” he said.

For their part, Democrats, led by the recently launched Demand Justice Initiative, are spending heavily to sway two moderate Republican­s, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine, to oppose Kavanaugh.

Health care, abortion and the specter of a conservati­ve majority tossing out the court’s landmark Roe v. Wade abortion-rights decision dominate the liberal advertisin­g.

“Roe v. Wade is at stake, my access to health care is at stake, everything is at stake now,” one woman in a Planned Parenthood Action ad running in Alaska says to the camera.

Although Democrats are running fewer ads than Republican­s in the Kavanaugh fight, their spending marks a sharp increase from the 2017 battle over Gorsuch, who replaced arch-conservati­ve Justice Antonin Scalia on the court.

Kavanaugh, a 53-year-old federal appellate judge, is in line to replace Justice Anthony Kennedy, a swing vote on issues ranging from abortion and gay rights to affirmativ­e action.

“The stakes are much higher now,” said Patrick Hickey, a political scientist at West Virginia University. “We’re sort of changing the court’s partisan balance.”

Demand Justice, formed in May as a liberal counterwei­ght in judicial ad wars, is the only progressiv­e group that aired ads focused on red-state Democrats during the period examined.

“We know that they’re getting carpet-bombed by the pro-Kavanaugh forces,” said Brian Fallon, Demand Justice’s executive director. “We want to ensure that the voters in those states are hearing the other sides.”

Demand Justice aired nearly 3,200 ads this summer opposing Kavanaugh. Only the conservati­ve Judicial Crisis Network ran more, airing more than 3,500 that largely tout his credential­s.

“We want to make sure we’re out there to set the record straight,” said Carrie Severino, the chief counsel and policy director at the Judicial Crisis Network. “We’re prepared to spend what we need to.”

The intensifyi­ng pressure on senators spilled into public view this week as Collins, the Maine Republican, reported receiving threatenin­g calls and letters about the impending Kavanaugh vote.

Collins also criticized as possible “extortion” a controvers­ial crowdfundi­ng campaign that has collected more than $1.1 million to donate to a future Collins opponent should she vote “yes” on Kavanaugh.

 ?? SOURCE Broadcast ads between July 9 and Sept. 7 tracked by Kantar’s Campaign Media Analysis Group VERONICA BRAVO/USA TODAY ??
SOURCE Broadcast ads between July 9 and Sept. 7 tracked by Kantar’s Campaign Media Analysis Group VERONICA BRAVO/USA TODAY
 ?? AP ?? GOP ads urging the confirmati­on of Brett Kavanaugh have trained heavily on Democratic incumbents such as Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, D-N.D.
AP GOP ads urging the confirmati­on of Brett Kavanaugh have trained heavily on Democratic incumbents such as Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, D-N.D.
 ??  ?? Brett Kavanaugh
Brett Kavanaugh

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