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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsPA-18: GOP Panic Spreads to Pennsylvania
Republicans are learning an uncomfortable reality about the political environment for 2018: Tax cuts, conservative culture-war staples, and even Nancy Pelosi herself probably wont be enough to overcome the deep hole that President Trump has put them in. With the White House awash in scandal and struggling to articulate its agenda, the political mood has turned so grim that Republicans are in danger of losing an upcoming special election in the heart of Trump country.
Thats the lesson to draw from the surprisingly competitive campaign Democrat Conor Lamb is running in a Pittsburgh-area district Trump easily carried by 20 points, surviving millions of dollars in outside GOP attack ads portraying Lamb as a liberal in disguise. Even a close loss in such a reliably conservative area would raise red flags that Democrats are on the verge of a major landslide in the November midterms.
If Lamb wins, it would be an unmistakable verdict that the healthy economy and Trump tax cuts will be overshadowed by the administrations dysfunction and roiling suburban anger. Though the economy may play to the GOPs advantage, the culture wars have turned squarely in the Democratic Partys favorand thats what matters in todays politics.
Heres how tricky things have gotten for Republicans: GOP outside groups have dramatically scaled back their ads promoting the partys tax cut, with the messaging barely moving the needle in the districts working-class confines. The latest round of advertisements focus on law-and-order issues, like immigration and crime. A new spot from the Paul Ryan-aligned Congressional Leadership Fund super PAC slams Lamb for supporting amnesty to illegal immigrants because he worked in the Obama administration. A National Republican Congressional Committee ad portrays Lamb as soft on crime because he negotiated a plea deal with a notorious drug kingpin during his tenure as a federal prosecutor. These culture-war ads are reminiscent of those run by Ed Gillespie in his failed Virginia gubernatorial campaign, and they carry the whiff of desperation.
https://www.nationaljournal.com/s/664776?unlock=8AE9X4M288STTFFK
elleng
(130,845 posts)and, sadly, often it works.
mahatmakanejeeves
(57,376 posts)GOP super PAC in #PA18 is sending mail to Dem voters, "thanking" @ConorLambPA for not wanting new gun laws. It's also telling GOP voters that Lamb *does* want new gun laws.
Link to tweet
By David Weigel March 1
BRIDGEVILLE, Pa. Conor Lamb, the Democratic nominee in a March 13 special congressional election in southwest Pennsylvania, has deviated from his partys positions on guns and a Republican super PAC wants Democratic voters to know about it.
An ad arriving by mail offers a backhanded thank you to Lamb from Congressional Leadership Fund, a super PAC aligned with House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) that has spent millions of dollars on the race.
The same group then turned around and sent GOP-leaning voters a very different spin on Lamb calling him an opponent of gun rights.
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David Weigel is a national political correspondent covering Congress and grass-roots political movements. He is the author of "The Show That Never Ends," a history of progressive rock music.
Follow @daveweigel
blue neen
(12,319 posts)He looked and sounded whiny and petty.