United States In
United States politics, negative campaigning has been called "as
American as Mississippi mud" and "as American as apple pie". Some research suggests negative campaigning is the norm in all political venues, mitigated only by the dynamics of a particular contest.
Lee Atwater, best known for being an advisor to presidents
Ronald Reagan and
George H. W. Bush, also pioneered many negative campaign techniques seen in political campaigns today. • 1828: The
Coffin Handbills used by supporters of
John Quincy Adams against
Andrew Jackson in the
1828 presidential campaign. • 1934: Unethical campaign tactics were used against
Upton Sinclair in the California gubernatorial election. • 1936: The first radio advertising using negative campaigning came from the
Republican Party in 1936. • 1964: The
Daisy ad used by
Lyndon Johnson against
Barry Goldwater in the
1964 United States presidential election • 2008:
Hillary Clinton's "3 a.m. phone call" ad questioning the
crisis management abilities of her opponent,
Barack Obama. • 2008:
Elizabeth Dole's ad against Democratic challenger
Kay Hagan in her
2008 Senate re-election campaign, where Hagan was said to be "Godless", as an attack to the lack of religious piety of her opponent. The ad backfired, as it sharply reduced support for Dole. Dole was defeated by Hagan in the election. • 2012–present:
Nicknames used by Donald Trump before, during, and after his presidency. • 2014:
Justin Amash was smeared as "
Al-Qaeda's best friend in Congress" by his primary opponent Brian Ellis.
Elsewhere • Argentina: In the
2023 Argentine general election, the governing
Unión por la Patria launched various
fearmongering ads during one of the worst economic crisis of the history of the nation, in which they claimed economic crisis and human rights would worsen if they're not voted. • New Zealand: In the
1975 New Zealand general election, the opposing
National Party launched the infamous
"Dancing Cossacks" television advertisement. Animated by
Hanna Barbera, the attack advert claimed the incumbent
Labour Party's recently introduced compulsory superannuation scheme could eventually lead to Soviet-style communism. • Canada: In the
1993 Canadian federal election, the
Progressive Conservative Party launched attack ads that were widely seen to be mocking opposing candidate Jean Chrétien's facial deformity. See:
1993 Chrétien attack ad • United Kingdom: During the run up to the
1997 general election, the
Conservative Party ran a campaign that stated that the
Labour Party was dangerous and used posters of Labour leader
Tony Blair with "demon eyes" on them titled "
New Labour, New Danger" (in reference to the
New Labour slogan). The campaign failed as Labour won a landslide victory, ending 18 years of Conservative government. • Mexico: in the 2006 presidential election,
Felipe Calderón, president from 2006 to 2012, launched TV ads that stated his opponent,
Andrés Manuel López Obrador, was "a danger to Mexico". To this day, López Obrador continues blaming the negative campaign for his defeat and saying that it was part of a conspiracy that the Mexican business
elite planned against him. • Canada: In the
2008 Canadian federal election, the
Conservative Party released an ad featuring Opposition Leader
Stéphane Dion being
defecated on by an animated
puffin. Harper later apologized for the ad. • In the Crewe and Nantwich By-election in 2008, The Labour Party ran a personal class-based campaign against the Conservative candidate Edward Timpson, calling him "the
Tarporley Toff", "
Lord Snooty", "
Tory Boy Timpson". Labour supporters donned
top hats to mock Timpson, whose family own a national shoe repair and key-cutting business. The campaign was very poorly received and was condemned as negative and xenophobic by Conservative leader David Cameron. • Serbia: In the
2018 Belgrade City Assembly election, the ruling party
SNS launched a negative campaign against two candidates,
Aleksandar Šapić and
Dragan Đilas. In a TV political ad they were portrayed as tycoons and criminals who are too busy protesting against
Aleksandar Vučić and meeting other criminals than attending meetings. The advertisement caught the attention of
REM, which resulted in a suspend of the advertisement. • Philippines: then-vice presidential candidate
Antonio Fuentes Trillanes IV aired a negative ad against then-presidential candidate
Rodrigo Duterte in the tail end of the
2016 Philippine general election highlighting his public obscenity. • Poland: Chairman of the Polish public broadcaster
TVP,
Jacek Kurski aired a negative claim against then-presidential candidate
Donald Tusk during
2005 Polish presidential election falsely claiming that his grandfather had briefly fought in Hitler's army. == See also ==