An attack ad in election terms is an advertisement whose message is meant as an attack against another candidate or political party. The ad criticizes the opponent's platform, usually by pointing out its faults and contrasting them against its own platform. The ads can be very useful in helping public opinion. One of the earliest, and one of the most famous, attack ads was one used by Lyndon Johnson against Barry Goldwater. The ad opened with a young girl innocently strolling through a field and gathering flowers. It then sharply cut to an extreme close up to her eye and then an image of a nuclear explosion. The ad was shocking and disturbing, but also very effective. It convinced many that Goldwater's more aggressive approach to fighting the Cold War could result in a nuclear apocalypse.
Attack ads were used with great success by the campaign of George H.W. Bush against Demcratic candidate Michael Dukakis in the 1988 presidential campaign. The two most famous were the "Willie Horton" ad, which displayed grainy visuals of a black rapist and murderer while an unseen announcer blamed Dukakis for letting him free to rape again, and an ad which ridiculed Dukakis with visuals of him looking foolish while riding in a tank.
An attackad in election terms is an advertisement whose message is meant as an attack against another candidate or political party.
Attackads were used with great success by the campaign of George H.W. Bush against Democratic candidate Michael Dukakis in the 1988 presidential campaign.
One of the earliest, and one of the most famous, attackads was one used by Lyndon Johnson against Barry Goldwater.
Attackads were used with great success by the campaign of George H.W. Bush against Demcratic candidate Michael Dukakis in the 1988 presidential campaign.