claiming that Joe Biden would defund police and 911 operators. It leans into fears about crime versus law and order, showing an elderly woman's home being broken into and explicitly saying "You won't be safe in Joe Biden's America.", a key state for Democrats after it went to Trump by a narrow margin of fewer than 11,000 votes in 2016.
The ad features Black men in a barbershop talking about the urgency of voting and putting experienced leaders in office. "There is no good reason, if you're able to vote, not to vote," one of them says.noted that television ads are rarely used for that purpose because the medium is so expensive. Instead, getting out the vote is usually left to door knocking and on-the-ground operations.
This year's strategy seems to have paid off as the state flipped its 16 electoral votes to Biden, withBiden's "Stand Together" ad in Georgia targeted Asian American voters, who "could play a decisive factor in the suburban 7th Congressional race," according to the