- Campaign Communications « Ads—Pre-Primary Period
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Tom Steyer 2020
Tom Steyer 2020
"Too Bad" +
:30 TV ad from Nov. 19, 2019 run locally in IA, NH, NV and SC.
[Music]
Steyer: I’m about to say two words that will make
Washington insiders very uncomfortable:
Term Limits.
You and I both know we need term limits… that Congress shouldn’t be a
lifetime appointment.
But members of Congress –– and the corporations who’ve bought [music stops] our
democracy –– hate term limits.
Too bad.
[music restarts] I’m
Tom Steyer, and I approve this message.
Because the only way we get universal health care, address climate
change and make our economy more fair is to change business as usual in
Washington.
Notes: The Nov. 19,
2019 press release...
New Tom Steyer Ad Calls for Term
Limits to Help End Corporate
Control of Congress
The ad will air in all four early states and will include digital ads across all campaign platforms
(SAN FRANCISCO, November 19, 2019) — Today,
presidential
Democratic
candidate
Tom
Steyer rolled out a new ad
calling for term limits in Congress to put power back in the hands of
the American people. This comes after Mr. Steyer pushed for term limits
and a national referendum last
night
on
the
Daily
Show with Trevor Noah.
The ad is part of Steyer’s Structural
Reforms
agenda. It comes as part of a campaign wide commitment
highlighting how Tom’s the only candidate in the race talking about
bold reforms such as term limits and a national referendum to increase
voter participation, end business as usual in Washington, and break the
corporate stranglehold on our government.
The ad will air locally in all
four early
primary and caucus states: Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina, and
Nevada. The campaign is also running digital ads.
“Members of Congress –– and the
corporations
who’ve bought our democracy –– hate term limits,” Steyer said in
the ad. “We need term limits –– because Congress shouldn’t be a
lifetime appointment. The only way we get universal health care,
address climate change, and make our economy more fair is to change
business as usual in Washington.”