Friday, March 29

Democrat Tim Ryan chase after Fox News viewers in Ohio Senate race



Rep. Tim Ryan — a Democrat angling to flip what many believed would be a safe Republican Senate seat in increasingly red Ohio — is unsubtly ratcheting up his efforts to woo GOP voters.

Ryan’s latest TV ad, shared first with NBC News, will begin airing this week exclusively on Fox News, although its reach could eventually expand beyond the cable network known for its conservative audience and prime-time programming.

Titled “Fox News Friends,” the 30-second spot is stuffed with clips of Fox personalities heralding Ryan’s “moderate ideas,” including during his brief run for president in 2020. Even Tucker Carlson — a commentator reviled on the left who has frequently hosted Ryan’s Republican general election rival, JD Vance — makes an appearance via a 2019 segment in which he encouraged his viewers to take note of how Ryan positioned himself to the right of other Democrats on border security. Carlson’s on-screen headline: “Not Everyone In The Dem 2020 Field Is A Lunatic.”

“Even the most conservative voices on TV agree: Tim Ryan is a voice for commonsense policies who stays focused on the issues that matter most to Ohioans,” Ryan spokesperson Izzi Levy said in a statement announcing the commercial, which is part of the campaign’s ongoing , eight-figure advertising blitz.

Vance, a venture capitalist and the best-selling author of “Hillbilly Elegy,” emerged from Ohio’s bruising GOP Senate primary in May, following a campaign that benefited from on-air support from Carlson and an endorsement from former President Donald Trump.

Ryan had a much clearer path to his party’s nomination, easily dispatching two lesser-known rivals. Since March, he’s been airing ads aimed at growing support beyond the traditional Democratic base. His first ad from him, which caught attention for its similarities to populist GOP messaging, blamed “Communist China” for US job losses and earned him a rebuke from Asian American groups who said the ad inflamed anti-Asian sentiments. Another ad Ryan featured bemoaning inflation and ended with him asserting that, instead of being Democrats or Republicans, “we have to be Americans first” — an echo to Trump’s “America First” slogan.

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A robust campaign account has kept Ryan on TV for months and allowed him to vastly outspend Vance since the primary. Last week, Ryan announced he had raised $9.1 million in the year’s second quarter, more than double what he raised in the first. Vance has yet to report his latest fundraising numbers from him.

The Cook Political Report rates the Ohio Senate seat, which is up for grabs because GOP incumbent Rob Portman is not seeking another term, as Lean Republican. Trump won the state twice by 8 percentage points, and Democrats there have had little success in statewide races, with the exception of Sen. Sherrod Brown.

Ryan, whose congressional district includes the post-industrial, Trump-friendly areas surrounding Youngstown, has long projected as a moderate Democrat. He was anti-abortion until 2015 and was opposed to Medicare for All when it was a defining ideological debate ahead of the 2020 presidential primaries.

Vance and his allies have dismissed Ryan’s bipartisan overtures for noting he has voted in lockstep with President Joe Biden’s agenda. They also note how Ryan skipped a Biden event last week in Ohio, a fact that Ryan’s team quickly moved to spin into a positive.

“It is truly hilarious,” Ryan adviser Justin Barasky tweeted“that JD Vance’s team believes they’ve found the way to take Tim Ryan down and it’s by highlighting his independence from President Biden.”




www.nbcnews.com

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