Yesterday Aaron Landry at MnPublius noticed that Norm Coleman’s latest campaign ad, a testimonial from former Minnesota Supreme Court Chief Justice Sandy Keith, violates a law that requires a four-second authorization tag at the end of campaign commercials. Break it and you’re supposed to forfeit your statutory entitlement to the deeply discounted rates that politicians customarily pay for advertising. He also reports that the Franken campaign is calling up stations that aired the Keith spot to tell them of their potential windfall.
By Landry’s estimate, enforcement of the law in Coleman’s case could burn up about $1 million in Coleman campaign funds. Glenn Thrush of Politico picks up the story today, but adds this caveat: “The law has never been seriously enforced – and the decision on the rate charge has often been left up to the discretion of individual stations. In 2006, then Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum made a similar mistake, but the Federal Communications Commission and the Federal Election Commission declined to force stations to hike.”
The ad is below.
Norm Coleman: “Sandy Keith” (:30)






3 Comments »
Comment posted September 11, 2008 @ 10:40 pm
Sandy Keith is one the long t]line of nonentity political hacks that managed to parlay their political connections into a judicial appointment. His legacy is cache of unmemorable legal opinions which will be if they not already have been forgotten. So it's not surpising that a person who, inh his time, stood for nothing, would fall for anything, including an empty suit and a blow dried haircut like Norm Coleman.
Comment posted September 12, 2008 @ 9:50 am
Sandy Keith, <a href=”http://www.mediatransparency.com/personprofile.php?personID=150″>Center of the American Experiment acolyte.
Comment posted September 12, 2008 @ 11:22 am
Don't most of Coleman's ads commit this violation? That odious commercial with the third-grader calling Al Franken “like, a hundred years old” shows Norm for no more than 3 seconds. And Franken's equally dumb Billy Bass ad shows him for just 2 seconds at the beginning. (Although at the end there's a tiny thumbnail portrait of him in the bottom corner at the end. Is that all Coleman needed to do?)
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