{"id":261884,"date":"2004-09-01T04:00:00","date_gmt":"2004-09-01T08:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/issues\/television-attack-ads-planting-the-seeds-of-doubt\/"},"modified":"2025-10-07T19:43:44","modified_gmt":"2025-10-07T23:43:44","slug":"television-attack-ads-planting-the-seeds-of-doubt","status":"publish","type":"issues","link":"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/2004\/09\/television-attack-ads-planting-the-seeds-of-doubt\/","title":{"rendered":"Television attack ads: planting the seeds of doubt"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The 2004 federal election may be remembered as much for re-introducing minority government to Parliament as it will for its political advertising. While few, if any, elections are won or lost on one variable, the Liberals use of negative advertising in this one may be an important piece of the electoral puzzle. Understanding how they used advertising, as well as its relationship within the overall campaign might go some way to understanding the Liberal victory.<\/p>\n<p>Observers usually find several defining moments in a campaign and the federal election this year was no different. Among the usual list of things that are seen to change the course of an election are debates, advertising and the leaders&#8217; tours. Both leaders&#8217; tours and debates are heavily interpreted by the media. Our perception of them is shaped by media, pundits and spin doctors. Advertising is one of the few areas in which parties can control their messages but\u2014 as we shall see\u2014 often with little precision. As one of the campaign&#8217;s most visible and constant factors, advertising is seen as the perennial barometer of an election. Showing its high and low pressure points and predicting ways in which the electoral climate may change, political advertising may be an important indicator of who won and why.<\/p>\n<p>As a form of communication, advertising works on a number of different levels. Its effects can be seen not only in terms of paid media, that is the size of the advertising budget, but perhaps more so in terms of earned media, the amount of attention the ads garner in the media.<\/p>\n<p>When we think about the effectiveness of political ads, we need to think not only about whether it directly changed voters&#8217; minds but also about the ripples it generated in the media pond. Not only do ads work directly and indirectly, their effects on us can be seen in several ways. Good political ads provide both intellectual as well as emotional food for thought. But great ads are those which are burned into our psyche and resonate at an emotional level through powerful visuals. These mind bombs tap into existing thoughts often by making arguments that force the reader to supply a missing premise or piece of evidence. In doing so, we become agents of our own persuasion.<\/p>\n<p>Political campaigns\u2014 both here and abroad\u2014 are rife with examples of evocative visuals being used in election advertising. These ads are, almost exclusively, negative ones which might suggest that while we continue to reject negative ads, we do remember them. The beginning of political ads on television was 1952, though the real turning point was 1964 with the (in)famous\u00a0 \u201cDaisy.\u201d So incendiary was this ad, that it was broadcast only once because of its stark claims. It depicted a little girl picking petals from a flower as an ominous voice counted down from ten. It is quickly apparent that the voice is counting down for a rocket launch. As the voice gets to \u201cone\u201d the camera zooms into the girls eye which transforms into a nuclear mushroom cloud. Lyndon Johnson intones \u201cThese are the stakes. To make a world in which all of God&#8217;s children can live or to go into the darkness. We must either love each other or we must die.\u201d The narrator says \u201cVote for President Johnson on November 3rd. The stakes are too high for you to stay home.\u201d The ad makes a powerful claim about Johnson&#8217;s opponent, Barry Goldwater, without ever referring to him by name. More recently, Democratic contender Michael Dukakis was ridiculed in a 1988 ad that had him driving around in a tank. His Republican opponent, George H.W. Bush, used the footage to attack the claim that Dukakis was a strong supporter of national defence. That same election gave us the \u201cWilly Horton\u201d ad whose visual of a revolving turnstile powerfully reinforced the verbal argument that was being made, namely that Dukakis was soft on crime. In all of these cases, the ad did not supply any new information but was effective at reinforcing existing perceptions\u2014 a fact that bears remembering this election.<\/p>\n<p>In response to these ads, Canadians have argued smugly that our politics was different. We would never use such blatantly personal negative ads. Our recent history has seemed to bear this out until, of course, the ill-fated \u201cIs this a prime minister?\u201d ad that the Progressive Conservatives ran in 1993. Showing Jean Chretien&#8217;s facial paralysis the ads stated \u201cI personally would be very embarrassed if he were to become prime minister of Canada.\u201d While this was seen as an unequivocal failure, it marked the beginning of advertising as signal flare: a technique to get media and therefore public attention.<\/p>\n<p>Notwithstanding this one, our use of negative political ads has been more focused on issues than personal attributes. The textbook example of this was the Liberal \u201cborder ad\u201d that ran in 1988 after the leaders&#8217; debates. In a few sentences the tenor of the federal election changed dramatically. The ad showed two men sitting on opposite sides of a table. The Canada and US flags on the table identify them as negotiators. As the deal is about to be finalized, the American says, \u201c&#8230;there&#8217;s one line I&#8217;d like to change.\u201d The earnest young Canadian negotiator replies, \u201cWhich line is that?\u201d A pencil eraser begins to rub out the 49th parallel and the American says, \u201cThis line here. It&#8217;s just getting in the way.\u201d The ad worked because it picked up on polling data that many Canadians were concerned that free trade would result in a loss of Canadian sovereignty.<\/p>\n<p>Demonstrating the power of responding to negative ads, the Conservatives responded with a carpet-bombing strategy that featured a small number of ads shown in very high rotation. The ads visually and verbally had drawn the border line back in, while the narrator closed with, \u201cthis is where we draw the line.\u201d In doing so, the valence of the original Liberal ad was muted and the effects were softened. The Liberals actually withdrew their border ad earlier than scheduled.<\/p>\n<p>One of the intriguing questions raised in the 2004 election is why the Conservatives relied largely on positive ads and did not respond in kind to the rather powerful negative claims made in Liberal advertising. With only a couple of exceptions, the Conservative ads were largely positive.<\/p>\n<p>Negative ads are rarely used by themselves but rather are an adjunct to a broader campaign strategy. In the 1988 free trade election, the ads were only a part of the wider campaign to sow seeds of doubt about the merits of free trade or the motivations of its detractors. When then finance minister Michael Wilson announced that the Americans would rip up the Auto Pact if free trade was not ratified, advertising reinforced that message. We need to see advertising as the tip of the campaign iceberg. While it might be the most visible element of the campaign, its presence tells more about the large mass that is hidden than what is visible.<\/p>\n<p>In this election, predictably all the major parties used advertising to support their campaign&#8217;s key messages. In the case of the Liberals, their negative ads mimicked their campaign. Their strategy of asking Canadians to \u201cthink again\u201d before voting Conservative was not merely confined to their advertising but rather was evident in campaign speeches, photo-ops and other forms of communication. The Conservatives played the single note of government profligacy and waste\u2014 embodied in their slogan of \u201cdemand better.\u201d While their ads largely supported that campaign theme, it simply did not have the visceral power of the Liberal&#8217;s. An appeal to our pocket books was not as strong as an appeal to our hearts.<\/p>\n<p>The Conservatives did broadcast negative ads. Two of them, \u201cCookie Jar\u201d and \u201cCarousel,\u201d had simple story lines. Neither had the requisite emotional connection of the Liberal ads and both relied on the same argument that the Liberal government was wasteful. \u201cCookie Jar\u201d showed a cuffed hand\u2014 presumably representative of the Liberals\u2014 taking cookies out of a jar and another hand (the Conservatives?) putting them back in. Relying on carnival music that was dissonant with the visuals, \u201cCarousel\u201d showed stacks of money being thrown out, with the tag line, \u201cCan you really afford another four years of Liberal waste?\u201d Its humour was timid, its critiques repetitive and, most importantly, there was no clear attribution of responsibility to the government. It&#8217;s not a surprise that it was not as memorable as Liberal ads. Polling done by Leger Marketing earlier in the campaign supported this. They found that 74 percent of Canadians remember seeing one of the Liberal ads, 60 pecent a Conservative ad and 42 percent had seen one from the NDP.<\/p>\n<p>The Liberal ad that generated the most heat in the election was first aired on June 9, at the halfway point of the campaign. At this stage in the campaign, Conservative support was marginally higher than the Liberals but was trending upward according to polls done by CPAC-SES and Ipsos-Reid. \u201cHarper and the Conservatives\u201d was produced by the same ad company that brought us Molson&#8217;s \u201cThe Rant.\u201d Like \u201cThe Rant,\u201d \u201cHarper and the Conservatives\u201d made its point using a series of powerful, iconic images. Beginning with the provocative image of tanks rolling through a desert, moving on to a gun pointing at the camera through to a woman rocking on the floor of a hospital, the ad juxtaposed menacing images with an ominous soundtrack. It ended with a female voice-over that said \u201cStephen Harper says that when he&#8217;s through with Canada, we won&#8217;t recognize it. You know what? He&#8217;s right.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>A second Liberal ad, \u201cConservative Economics,\u201d superimposed the face of Stephen Harper over images of Brian Mulroney and Mike Harris. Using the same ominous music, the ad used an old technique of transference to make a visual argument (Harper was like Mulroney and Harris) without any kind evidence. In fact, the only connection verbally was \u201cNow Stephen Harper wants his turn.\u201d It was strikingly similar to the NDP ad that had Harper&#8217;s face between Ernie Eves and Mike Harris with the tag line \u201cConservative Cuts and Privatization.\u201d Both worked in the same manner as the Daisy ad did years ago\u2014 by making connections without any evidence to support them.<\/p>\n<p>One of the problems of attempting to infer the effects of an ad in an election campaign is that it is difficult to separate the ad&#8217;s effects from the media&#8217;s reporting of the ad and campaign photo-ops that support the arguments of the ad. If \u201cHarper and the Conservatives\u201d was successful, then it was so in part because it was an element of the larger Liberal campaign that highlighted the negative attributes of voting Conservative.<\/p>\n<p>The argument made in that ad\u2014 that Harper and the Conservatives were extreme and had a secret agenda\u2014 may have also been reinforced by the Conservative candidates themselves. Claims were made by candidates such as Randy White who said a Conservative government would scrap samesex marriages and ban abortions. Cheryl Gallant was quoted as saying that abortion was no different than the Iraqi beheading of American contractor Nicholas Berg and that gays and lesbians ought to be excluded from hate laws.<\/p>\n<p>Harper did not do enough to distance his party from these comments and also may have reinforced them himself. When, on June 18, the Conservative leader issued a press release saying \u201cPaul Martin Supports Child Pornography?\u201d the comparisons to the press release of Ontario Premier Ernie Eves that likened Dalton McGuinty to a \u201cEvil Reptilian Kitten Eater\u201d were obvious. Three days later he said that his government would revise the legislation that mandated French on Air Canada flights causing a further brushfire that needed to be stamped out. In all of these cases, the Conservatives were providing superb earned media for Liberal claims found in their ads.<\/p>\n<p>The fact that the Conservatives did not answer the Liberal arguments is surprising given how critical they were. They may not have responded for a number of reasons. Perhaps they were not anticipating the claims in them, though this seems implausible as they were supported by other campaign material. A more likely scenario is that they believed that, like other negative ads, they would backfire. Why they did not had to do with the way in which images were framed. Jack Bensimon, the creator of \u201cHarper and the Conservatives\u201d summarizes it well when he says \u201cfear of the alternative trumped anger at the status quo.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Like the \u201cfacial paralysis\u201d ad of Jean Chr\u00e9tien in 1993, the Conservatives may have thought that it was sufficiently personal to not warrant a response.<\/p>\n<p>Could another explanation be that the Conservatives thought that they had won the election and therefore needn&#8217;t have responded to them? The Liberals use of negative ads suggest that they knew that it was a tight election. The last weekend cross-Canada sprint by Paul Martin reaffirms his claim that he was indeed in a \u201cfight for his life.\u201d This is in sharp contrast to Stephen Harper, who spent the late part of the campaign in the safe confines of Western Canada\u2014 hardly evidence that they believed the election was in trouble. Paul Wells, writing in <em>Maclean&#8217;s,<\/em> says that with 48 hours to go, Stephen Harper spoke about the election in the past tense, as if it were a done deal.<\/p>\n<p>Parties have not yet reported their official expenditures to Elections Canada, but media buying numbers support the claim that in this election all three national parties spent more on advertising than in previous elections.\u00a0Taking advantage of the <em>Elections Act<\/em>, which excludes expenses made before the writ, both the Liberals and the Conservatives began their advertising campaign before the election with election-style spots featuring both their respective leaders. Preliminary data from Neilsen are available on some election advertising. The data from Toronto show that the Conservatives engaged in more advertising than the other parties prior to the election and that during the election they outspent the other parties. This is likely a result of the Conservatives spending more in prime time than the Liberals, whose ads ran in higher frequency in the greater Toronto area. In Toronto, the NDP had the second-highest gross rating points of all parties, which supports the oft-made claim that the NDP was also heavily involved in the advertising game in this election.<\/p>\n<p>While the NDP generally was on the sidelines of the main advertising battle, this election was pivotal for them for at least a couple of reasons. First is the breakthrough in the amount of money it spent on advertising\u2014 likely an unprecedented amount for that party. Second is the decision by the NDP to run an ad on ethnic channels featuring Jack Layton and Olivia Chow speaking in Mandarin. This was the first time a party had taken such a step. While parties routinely translate paper campaign material into different languages, and take out ads in ethnic newspapers, the step to produce a television ad in a non-official language was entirely new. This trend was also pioneered in 2000 when Republican presidential candidates aired television ads in Spanish to appeal to the Hispanic population. Both of these might also suggest that the NDP is moving more toward the American-style campaigning of the other two parties and a brokerage style of politics, which sees the party adopting centrist policies to appeal to diverse, regionally concentrated ethnic communities.<\/p>\n<p>To ask if election ads were effective is to somehow see a simple correlation between an advertisement and popular support. The way in which ads work is usually more complex than that. Good negative ads do not persuade as much as they are able to reinforce existing opinion and translate that into sowing seeds of doubt about one&#8217;s opponent. While attempting to infer election results from advertising is a bit like reading tea leaves, it appears as if the Liberal ads did just that\u2014 they raised sufficient enough questions about Stephen Harper and the Conservative&#8217;s agenda. What this election reminds us is that in a closely fought contest, advertising can play an important role in shaping the outcome.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p><em>Jonathan Rose would like to acknowledge the assistance of Simon Kiss and Hugh Mellon, both of whom provided helpful comments.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The 2004 federal election may be remembered as much for re-introducing minority government to Parliament as it will for its political advertising. While few, if any, elections are won or lost on one variable, the Liberals use of negative advertising in this one may be an important piece of the electoral puzzle. Understanding how they [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":0,"template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"content-type":"","ep_exclude_from_search":false,"apple_news_api_created_at":"2025-10-07T23:43:46Z","apple_news_api_id":"aa358fbd-abdd-48e4-ab7a-7c476bb5fc76","apple_news_api_modified_at":"2025-10-07T23:43:46Z","apple_news_api_revision":"AAAAAAAAAAD\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/w==","apple_news_api_share_url":"https:\/\/apple.news\/AqjWPvavdSOSrenxHa7X8dg","apple_news_cover_media_provider":"image","apple_news_coverimage":0,"apple_news_coverimage_caption":"","apple_news_cover_video_id":0,"apple_news_cover_video_url":"","apple_news_cover_embedwebvideo_url":"","apple_news_is_hidden":"","apple_news_is_paid":"","apple_news_is_preview":"","apple_news_is_sponsored":"","apple_news_maturity_rating":"","apple_news_metadata":"\"\"","apple_news_pullquote":"","apple_news_pullquote_position":"","apple_news_slug":"","apple_news_sections":[],"apple_news_suppress_video_url":false,"apple_news_use_image_component":false},"categories":[9346],"tags":[],"article-status":[],"irpp-category":[],"section":[],"irpp-tag":[],"class_list":["post-261884","issues","type-issues","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"acf":[],"apple_news_notices":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Television attack ads: planting the seeds of doubt<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/2004\/09\/television-attack-ads-planting-the-seeds-of-doubt\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"fr_FR\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Television attack ads: planting the seeds of doubt\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The 2004 federal election may be remembered as much for re-introducing minority government to Parliament as it will for its political advertising. 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