Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Ad buys show it's Tea time for Senate GOP

Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., talks on his cell phone while eating a chocolate doughnut before the start of the House Oversight Committee hearing with Attorney General Eric Holder, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Feb. 2, 2012. Burton has announced that he is ending a three-decade career in the U.S. House due to an undisclosed family health concern. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Harry Hamburg/AP

Tea Party caucus members (l. to r.) Rep. Mick Mulvaney (R-S.C.), Rep. Dan Burton, (R-Ind.) and Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) are listed as clients of The Strategy Group for Media.

ALBANY ? The GOP majority in the state Senate is trying to avoid an electoral revolution ? by dishing out cash to an ad firm with deep Tea Party ties.

The Senate GOP has already paid The Strategy Group for Media $25,000 to work on TV advertisements geared toward the fall election, according to the latest campaign filings.

The Ohio-based company lists among its clients a host of congressional Tea Party caucus members, including Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.), Rep. Dan Burton (R-Ind.) and Rep. Mick Mulvaney (R-S.C.).

The group also has done ads for Citizens United, a conservative nonprofit that waged a lawsuit that resulted in a landmark Supreme Court decision barring the government from restricting independent political expenditures by corporations and unions ? a verdict that opponents say magnified the role of special interests in the electoral process.

And it has worked for the Family Research Council, a Christian group that has fought against gay marriage and abortion.

On its website, The Strategy Group quotes a biblical proverb and promises ads that ?touch the heart and appeal to the mind.?

It boasts of winning in more than 80% of the campaigns it has worked on in the past five election cycles, including ? by its own count ? the most Republican majority pickups of state legislative chambers of any ad firm.

?We have been blessed with an opportunity to change America for the better by helping elect good people to public office,? the firm stated.

The Senate GOP paid the company $53,000 for ads in 2010 in its successful attempt to recapture a majority in Albany?s upper chamber.

Senate Democratic spokesman Michael Murphy, however, says the firm?s rehiring ?sends a message that Senate Republicans are being led by the extreme right wing of the party and are out of touch with the average New Yorker.?

Senate GOP spokesman Scott Reif downplayed the firm?s Tea Party ties.

?This is an absurd line of attack, even for the increasingly desperate Senate Democrats ? and the facts bear that out,? Reif said.

He noted how the Senate Republicans over the last 18 months have worked closely with Gov. Cuomo and the Democratic majority in the Assembly to end Albany?s dysfunction and ?deliver the bipartisan results New Yorkers want and deserve.?

But even Cuomo ? who has repeatedly refused to publicly back the Senate Dems? effort to retake the chamber ? recently criticized the GOP for kowtowing to the right after the conference blocked a potential minimum wage hike and the governor?s push to decriminalize the public possession of small amounts of pot.

?There is no place in this state for extreme conservative theory,? Cuomo railed. ?If the Senate wants to run as extreme conservatives, how much do you want to bet on the outcome in November??

l l l

A little-noticed article last week could have major implications for control of the Senate.

State Sen. Jeffrey Klein, one of four breakaway Democrats who formed an independent caucus, was quoted in the Riverdale Press as saying he would not support a Republican for Senate majority leader next year.

Klein, who is running on the Democratic and Republican lines this fall, is on record as saying he won?t back current Democratic Leader John Sampson (D-Manhattan), either.

So if the Dems win control of the upper chamber, Klein can either support a different Senate Democrat, or ? in a move full of intrigue ? try to grab the leadership himself, with GOP backing, insiders say.

klovett@nydailynews.com

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nydnrss/news/~3/Lh9eb-t4n5c/story01.htm

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