Koch network starts tax-related attack ads in Indiana, Missouri

The political network backed by billionaires Charles and David Koch is launching a $4 million advertising campaign against two Senate Democrats facing re-election in 2018, as it starts to fulfill a pledge to spend $20 million selling the federal tax overhaul passed late last year.

The television and online ads are critical of Senator Joe Donnelly of Indiana and Senator Claire McCaskill of Missouri for voting against the tax legislation. They’re two of the 10 Senate Democrats on the ballot in states won by President Donald Trump in 2016 and potentially vulnerable to Republican challengers.

The Koch-affiliated group Americans for Prosperity is sponsoring the ads, which are scheduled to start Thursday and run for about three weeks.

David Koch, executive vice president of Koch Industries Inc.
David Koch, executive vice president of Koch Industries Inc., smiles as Mark Carney, governor of the Bank of England, not seen, speaks to the Economic Club of New York in New York, U.S., on Monday, Dec. 9, 2013. Photographer: Jin Lee

“Joe Donnelly and Claire McCaskill promised tax reform for years but chose partisan politics over Indiana and Missouri families when they had a once-in-a-generation opportunity to provide tax relief,” AFP President Tim Phillips said in a statement. “Americans deserve better, which is why AFP is committed to ensuring citizens see the pro-growth benefits of tax reform despite dismissals and deception from ‘no’ votes like Donnelly and McCaskill.”

Koch Campaign

The ads are part of the roughly $400 million the network expects to spend on state and federal policy and politics during the two-year election cycle that culminates with the November midterm elections. That marks roughly a 60 percent increase over 2015-16. Phillips has said more than a third of that total has already been spent.

The campaign over the tax law will try to show Americans that the legislation, which Trump signed in late December, will improve the economy, and their lives. Seminars, workshops, town-hall style events, phone banks and door-to-door visits are all planned, in addition to targeted advertising on television, radio and digital platforms.

The Koch network estimates it spent more than $20 million nationally last year to urge passage of the tax legislation.

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