Jeb
Bush will target New Hampshire with first TV ads
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[September 05, 2015]
By Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican Jeb
Bush's first TV ads of his 2016 White House campaign will target New
Hampshire, his team said on Friday, in a reflection of his need to do
well in an early voting state where rival John Kasich has been making
inroads.
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The initial $500,000 buy will include Boston broadcast television
and New Hampshire station WMUR, Bush spokeswoman Kristy Campbell
said.
Ads will start running next Wednesday and continue through the rest
of the month. Targeted online advertising will also be included.
New Hampshire's primary next Feb. 9 follows the Iowa caucuses on
Feb. 1 that launch the parties' nominating contests for the November
2016 presidential election.
"This is the first step in a multi-week process where we will be
expanding our advertising in New Hampshire and the other early
states," Campbell said of the Bush ads.
They will focus on Bush's "strong conservative record of reform and
his plan to change the culture in Washington," she said. Bush has been in a highly visible feud this week with Donald Trump,
front-runner to be the Republican nominee. But he is also keeping an
eye on Kasich.
Kasich, the Ohio governor who is competing with Bush for the support
of establishment Republicans, has already been on the air in New
Hampshire with TV ads and he has frequently visited the state.
Bush and Kasich are running about even in opinion polls of
Republican voters in New Hampshire. Many voters cite both men as
their top choices, and both Bush and Kasich need to do well in New
Hampshire since they are lagging in Iowa.
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Bush, a former Florida governor, told reporters on Thursday in
Laconia, New Hampshire, that he feels good about his position in
spite of the summer rise of real estate magnate Trump.
"People as they get closer to the election, they'll start thinking
who can sit behind the big desk, who can make tough decisions, who
has a proven record?" Bush said. "I think I can make a pretty good
case over the long haul that I am that guy."
(Reporting by Steve Holland; Editing by Frances Kerry)
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