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News News Articles Press Releases Deb Fischer Thursday, Sep 12 2024

ICYMI: Endangered Nebraska Senator Deb Fischer Caught Using Foreign Stock Footage in TV Ads

Sep 12, 2024

Looks like Ted Cruz isn’t the only endangered Republican senator using foreign stock footage in TV ads. Nebraska Republican Senator Deb Fischer recently got caught using foreign stock footage from Ukraine, Romania, Bosnia, and Thailand in two different TV ads.

David Weigel of Semafor highlighted that a scene in Fischer’s negative ad, which is meant to depict Nebraska farmland, is actually a photo of a farm in Ukraine. Heartland Signal uncovered that in another TV ad, Fischer features people in different countries while touting the work she’s done for American families. It’s no surprise that someone who could not tell the difference between Rutgers and Nebraska has lost touch with real Nebraskans.

“Deb Fischer filled her ads with images of foreigners because she can’t be bothered to actually talk to real Nebraskans. With polls this close and mistakes this big, it’s clear that Fischer is in trouble,” said American Bridge 21st Century Senate Communications Director Nico Delgado. 


See here.

Heartland Signal: Deb Fischer uses stock footage of people in Romania, Bosnia and Thailand for political ad
Last month, Nebraska Sen. Deb Fischer (R) released a political ad touting the work she has done for American families, yet the ad featured multiple scenes of people in different countries.

The opening shot of the ad features a family listening to a doctor in a hospital room with the emphasis on a bill to expand paid family medical leave, which is co-sponsored by Fischer. However, the footage features a family in a Romanian hospital, not an American one.

The next shot shows a doctor speaking to a young girl with a broken arm, which is stock footage of Thai origin. Eighteen seconds into the ad, a shot of school children working is shown while the audio praises Fischer for securing $2 million in education funding for Nebraska. According to the video’s page on Alamy.com, it was shot in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The first shot of Fischer’s ad also features text saying that Fischer “passed the first ever paid family and medical leave law,” which is misleading because the bill in question (S.3680) has been introduced and referred to the Senate Finance Committee. The bill, which would implement a permanent paid family and medical leave tax credit into federal law, has not been voted on in Congress at any level.

Fischer has served as Nebraska’s junior Senator since January 2013 after an eight-year career in the Nebraska Legislature. She was endorsed by former President Donald Trump in her reelection bid, and she will face independent candidate Dan Osborn in November.

Read more in Heartland Signal.


Published: Sep 12, 2024

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