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Conservative group launches $1 million anti-Trump ad campaign in Iowa

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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The national conservative group Club for Growth announced a $1 million ad campaign attacking Donald Trump in Iowa on Tuesday, marking the most direct and well-funded attempt from within the Republican Party yet to take down its presidential front-runner.

Club for Growth president David McIntosh unveiled a pair of TV ads for reporters at a press conference Washington. One accuses Trump of being a closet liberal and shows images of Democratic contenders Bernie Sanders and Hillary Rodham Clinton. The other charges Trump "supports eminent domain abuse."

McIntosh said the ads, which are being aired by Club for Growth Action, the organization's super PAC, will hit the TV airwaves later this week.

"He's playing [voters] for chumps," McIntosh said of Trump.

Here are videos of the ads:

The ads were released a day before the second Republican debate at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California. Trump will be positioned on center stage during the debate, reflecting his lead in the polls.

They also come after a sustained effort by the Club for Growth to persuade skeptical donors that it is a good idea to attack Trump. The Washington Post reported earlier this month that the group, which has feuded with Trump for months, started asking top Republican donors in recent weeks to give donate money to fund attacks against Trump. But some GOP donors were skeptical of the plan, fearing it could fuel Trump’s outsider appeal.

McIntosh said that on the whole, donors are "very supportive."

The ad campaign could be mutually beneficial. The Club has relied heavily upon picking fights with other Republicans in recent years. And Trump has made running against the GOP establishment a centerpiece of his campaign.

Trump has insisted that the Club for Growth is attacking him because he refused to write them a $1 million check after a meeting with him earlier this year. Club for Growth officials says Trump's team requested the meeting.

“They came to my office, the president of the Club for Growth came to my office; he asked for a million dollars," Trump said in a recent interview with The Washington Post. "He asked for it in writing, just to show you how truly stupid he is. I said, ‘You must be kidding.’ I had no interest in doing it...We told them no, and immediately thereafter, he came after Trump.”

Trump campaigned before thousands in a professional sports arena in Dallas on Monday night. He emphasized his hard-line views on immigration, including his desire to build a wall on the nation's southern border and deport all illegal immigrants. Many Republicans fear his views are damaging the party's brand.

McIntosh said his group does not take a position on immigration.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...mp-ad-campaign-in-iowa/?tid=pm_politics_pop_b
 
The Romney surrogates are working overtime bashing Trump. I believe we are seeing the beginnings of a concerted effort by the Republican elders to take control.
 
2 party system blows. Funny when the own party wants to take down a front runner after trump signs pledge to not run as an independent.
 
They would be better to take on his policy proposals than his associations with the Clintons. His protectionist trade policies that cons cheer are right out of the liberal handbook. It fills me with hope. Of course pointing out that he's liberal on an issue the whole nation apparently wants to get more liberal on is a risky proposition. What's a con to do?
 
The national conservative group Club for Growth announced a $1 million ad campaign attacking Donald Trump in Iowa on Tuesday, marking the most direct and well-funded attempt from within the Republican Party yet to take down its presidential front-runner.

Club for Growth president David McIntosh unveiled a pair of TV ads for reporters at a press conference Washington. One accuses Trump of being a closet liberal and shows images of Democratic contenders Bernie Sanders and Hillary Rodham Clinton. The other charges Trump "supports eminent domain abuse."

McIntosh said the ads, which are being aired by Club for Growth Action, the organization's super PAC, will hit the TV airwaves later this week.

"He's playing [voters] for chumps," McIntosh said of Trump.

Here are videos of the ads:

The ads were released a day before the second Republican debate at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California. Trump will be positioned on center stage during the debate, reflecting his lead in the polls.

They also come after a sustained effort by the Club for Growth to persuade skeptical donors that it is a good idea to attack Trump. The Washington Post reported earlier this month that the group, which has feuded with Trump for months, started asking top Republican donors in recent weeks to give donate money to fund attacks against Trump. But some GOP donors were skeptical of the plan, fearing it could fuel Trump’s outsider appeal.

McIntosh said that on the whole, donors are "very supportive."

The ad campaign could be mutually beneficial. The Club has relied heavily upon picking fights with other Republicans in recent years. And Trump has made running against the GOP establishment a centerpiece of his campaign.

Trump has insisted that the Club for Growth is attacking him because he refused to write them a $1 million check after a meeting with him earlier this year. Club for Growth officials says Trump's team requested the meeting.

“They came to my office, the president of the Club for Growth came to my office; he asked for a million dollars," Trump said in a recent interview with The Washington Post. "He asked for it in writing, just to show you how truly stupid he is. I said, ‘You must be kidding.’ I had no interest in doing it...We told them no, and immediately thereafter, he came after Trump.”

Trump campaigned before thousands in a professional sports arena in Dallas on Monday night. He emphasized his hard-line views on immigration, including his desire to build a wall on the nation's southern border and deport all illegal immigrants. Many Republicans fear his views are damaging the party's brand.

McIntosh said his group does not take a position on immigration.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...mp-ad-campaign-in-iowa/?tid=pm_politics_pop_b

I find it interesting what liberals consider to be "Conservative" . I am a conservative, and man it is hard to find any real conservative part to the GOP. The liberals in this country have gone so far left that the Bush family looks conservative to them. What we have is the Liberal Party (GOP) running against the Ultra Liberal Party (Dems). As a conservative, my only choice is to voter for the lessor of two evils. Trump is no conservative. I will give him credit though, He is the only candidate that is not a pussy.
 
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