NPR
By Peter Overby
August 27, 2015
Late
August may be the absolutely worst time to launch a political TV blitz.
But a Democratic superPAC, Priorities USA Action, is offering up a
minicampaign this week
and next, warning Republicans that their heated rhetoric on immigration
is captured on videotape and being prepped for prime time later in the
race.
Since
billionaire Donald Trump announced for the Republican nomination in
June, he's set the agenda in the immigration debate. As he has moved up
the polls to become the
front-runner, other GOP candidates have echoed much, but not all, of
his anti-immigrant rhetoric.
In
the digital-only ad, Trump and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush are shown
using harsh language, including the phrase "anchor baby," to describe
Hispanic immigrants and
their U.S.-born children. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker also appears
briefly in the 30-second spot. The ad says, in subtitled English and
Spanish, "Seventeen Republicans are running for president with one
message for immigrant families."
Priorities
USA Action says the ad will appear on Facebook, Twitter and
mobile-device video in Colorado, Florida and Nevada — three swing states
with big Hispanic populations
— but only for a week or two. And without broadcast TV in the mix, it's
a small-dollar effort. The message is that Priorities has the video and
will be happy to show more of it to Hispanic voters later.
The
superPAC's executive director, Anne Caprara, issued a statement that
Trump had set the tone on immigration and "Priorities will make sure
that the American public
doesn't forget what the eventual Republican nominee said way back in
the ugly summer of Trump."
Memories
might not prove that durable. "I'm glad this is happening in August
2015 and not August 2016," said Brian J. Walsh, a Republican consultant.
On immigration, he
said, "there's no question that Donald Trump is hurting the party right
now, especially the way Hispanics and independents view the party."
But
tidal waves of new issues will be breaking between now and the
nominating conventions next summer, and Walsh said most of the
candidates' current remarks on immigration
will be "in the rearview mirror."
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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