PHILADELPHIA (TNS) — A super PAC backing U.S. Rep. Conor Lamb’s Democratic campaign for Senate in Pennsylvania made its first real foray into the race this week — and it didn’t go well.
The group, Penn Progress, launched an attack ad that wrongly called Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, the Democratic front-runner, a “self-described democratic socialist,” drawing ire from national Democrats and rebukes from fact-checkers. Within a day of the ad airing, PolitiFact and Factcheck.org called it false, a Philadelphia TV station took it off the air, and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., called on Lamb to disavow it.
Perhaps most alarming for Lamb, the campaign arm for Senate Democrats, which was already seen as likely to stay on the sidelines in the primary, signaled it won’t get involved in a race where Lamb badly needs to change the dynamic.
Taken together, the developments underscored how the window for Lamb, underfunded and behind in the polls, is closing fast ahead of the May 17 primary.
”The hope is that the ad sparks positive publicity … but by being sloppy in how they made the ad, Lamb’s super PAC shot itself in the foot,” said J.J. Balaban, a Philadelphia-based Democratic strategist.
The 30-second spot aims to paint Fetterman as a socialist who would be a risky candidate for Democrats in the general election. The PAC behind it, led by veteran Democratic strategists including James Carville, is trying to raise big money to help Lamb bridge yawning deficits in fundraising and campaign surveys. The group has put $800,000 behind airing the ad so far in the Philadelphia, Wilkes-Barre, and Pittsburgh media markets, according to AdImpact, which tracks political advertising.
And the ad made a big splash — just likely not in the way the group intended.
”I saw the PAC ad that is currently running in Pennsylvania. It is wrong and it is disgusting,” Warren told Politico on Wednesday. “And if Conor Lamb wants to stand up as a Democrat, then he needs to disavow that ad today.”
Fetterman’s campaign blasted the ad, and WPVI, an ABC affiliate in Philadelphia, took it off the air.
”It’s not often that an attack ad starts airing AND gets pulled from TV for being false in the very same day, but… this ad from Conor Lamb’s super PAC is not only demonstrably false, it’s desperate, and frankly sad,” Fetterman campaign spokesperson Joe Calvello said in a statement. “We expect stations across the commonwealth to follow suit and pull this ad, which is full of lies.”
The ad cites an NPR article in calling Fetterman a “self-described democratic socialist,” but the article was corrected to make clear Fetterman has never actually described himself that way. (At least eight other news outlets published articles describing Fetterman that way.) The ad also calls him “a silver-spoon socialist,” a quote from former Pennsylvania GOP chair Val DiGiorgio.
Erik Smith, who heads the PAC, did not comment on the backlash.
Super PACs, which can accept unlimited donations but cannot coordinate with campaigns they support, often take signals from those candidates about what messaging to use. And the ad does mirror some of Lamb’s own criticisms of Fetterman.
Throughout the race, Lamb has campaigned as the kind of moderate Democrat who can win a big, politically divided state like Pennsylvania — a profile similar to Democrats like President Joe Biden and Sen. Bob Casey. And Lamb has argued Fetterman is too progressive to win the seat being vacating by retiring Republican Sen. Pat Toomey.
At a debate on Sunday, Lamb said the socialist label would “stick” to Fetterman more so than other Democrats because of his past support for Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaign and Medicare for All.
In November, Lamb tweeted: “If you want a Senator who runs as a Socialist … I’M NOT YOUR GUY. That’s not how you beat Republicans.” He later acknowledged he was referring to Fetterman.
Lamb’s campaign didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment Thursday.
The Democratic contest had been mostly cordial until last week, and the new ad upset some national Democrats wary of fracturing the party in a race both sides see as key to control of the Senate. Unlike in 2016, national Democrats haven’t anointed a favored Pennsylvania candidate.