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American Crossroads’ $8 million buy

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Conservative super PAC American Crossroads made one of the largest single ad buys of the election so far, spending nearly $8 million on ads opposing President Barack Obama, the group reported to the Federal Election Commission Friday.

 Co-founded by Republican strategist Karl Rove, American Crossroads spent $7.9 million on air time to Crossroads Media and $40,000 on ad production to McCarthy-Hennings Media Inc., the same firm that created the negative ads for pro-Mitt Romney super PAC Restore Our Future.

American Crossroads posted “Build” on YouTube Friday, an ad attacking Obama’s position on small business, and “Smoke” on Thursday, which blames Obama for not fixing the economy and frames Obama’s attacks on Mitt Romney’s business record as a smokescreen.

“Smoke” is airing for 11 days in Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Michigan, North Carolina, New Hampshire, Nevada, Ohio and Virginia, according to news reports. American Crossroads has not issued a press release.

One of the ad’s central claims, that Obama added $4 billion in new debt every day, is misleading, according to an analysis by the Associated Press.

Congress holds the nation’s purse strings. Furthermore, the ad takes an overly simplistic view that the national debt is a major driver of the weak economy, according to the AP analysis.

This ad campaign from American Crossroads comes just as its sister nonprofit, Crossroads GPS, finishes up its own $8 million ad blitz in the same states with the ad “Tried,” which ran from July 12 until Sunday, according to apress release (because the ad is considered an “electioneering communication” under FEC rules, it was not reported to the FEC).

“Tried” repeats the same $4-billion-a-day debt figure and uses much of the same language as “Smoke.”

American Crossroads finished June with $31.5 million cash on hand, it reported Friday in its monthly filing. Of the $5.8 million American Crossroads brought in last month (its best month ever), $2 million of that came from homebuilder and super donor Bob Perry. The group also received several half-million-dollar donations in June:

McCaw, who is worth $1.6 billion, according to Forbes, made his fortune in the telecom industry, went on to be CEO of Clearwire and now runs Eagle River Investments.

McCaw has contributed nearly $300,000 since 2008 almost exclusively to Republican candidates, though he did give $2,300 to Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign. He supported former Republican Gov. Jon Huntsman of Utah in the 2012 GOP primary race and gave $37,500 to pro-Huntsman super PAC Our Destiny, according to CRP.

The CEO of Fox Paine and Co., Saul Fox, has given $91,000 almost entirely to Republican candidates and committees since 2008, according to CRP, and Fox Paine and Co. has given $142,050 to mostly Republican candidates and parties since 2000, according to the Sunlight Foundation. This appears to be the first election Mercury Trust has made a political donation.

Mercury Trust also gave $425,000 to Restore Our Future in June.

In other outside spending news

 

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