The dirty little secret behind attack ads

The Liberal ads are an appeal to the reptile part of our brains, the ‘fight or flight’ part, where panic, rage and fear reside

by Andrew Coyne on Friday, January 15, 2010 10:43am - 144 Comments

The dirty little secret behind attack ads

Even the words are creepy. “Cover-up. A description far more familiar to other countries. Until now.” But as we all know, it’s the sounds and imagery that make an attack ad. “When questions arose [ominous, metallic hum; barbed wire graphic] about what he and his government knew about torture in Afghanistan [clanging noise; more barbed wire], Stephen Harper shut down Parliament. Why doesn’t he want to face Parliament? [Militaristic snare drum; bell tolls.] What does Stephen Harper know that he doesn’t want other Canadians to know?”

I give up. His age? The combination to his gym locker? We’re never told. But we’re plainly invited to assume the worst. All is insinuation, right down to the sneer in the announcer’s voice.

Now, this is hardly the most outstanding example, as these things go. And there is a bedrock of truth to it. Stephen Harper did shut down Parliament. That does raise questions about what he knows, but won’t say, about “torture in Afghanistan.” But that wasn’t enough for the Liberals, who made the ad. It never is.

It was not enough merely to criticize the government for proroguing (“shut down”) Parliament. An appeal had rather to be made to the reptile part of our brains, the “fight or flight” part, where panic, rage, and fear reside. That’s what attack ads aim for: not to stir up debate, but to make debate redundant.

To be clear: there’s nothing wrong with politicians criticizing one another—“going negative,” in the vernacular. But it matters how you go about it: whether your aim is to engage the public, or inflame them.

Those in the game offer two standard defences. One, the other guys started it. This is invariably true: whatever sin one party may have committed, it can always find a precedent in its opponents. Which is handy, since it means neither side need justify its actions in its own right, but only by way of the other’s.

And the second? Simple: they work. This is presented, not as an amusing irony, a comment on man’s fallen nature, but as a justification. Oh, they work, you say? Well, in that case I withdraw my objections.

So often has this been repeated that it has become accepted wisdom. Say what you will about attack ads, journalists will observe, but they work. Really? Then why do they have to keep making new ones? Elections generally have losers as well as winners. Somebody’s ads must not be working.

In fact, most of them don’t. Political parties come up with dozens of ads in the course of a campaign. Some work. Most fail. You just try something, and see.

This is the dirty little secret of the trade, forgotten in all the breathless coverage of the “rainmakers” and their strategies for “moving the numbers.” There’s a saying in Hollywood: “Nobody knows anything.” Meaning nobody knows what makes a hit picture. You just try something, and see.

What no one seems to want to consider is this: maybe people in politics don’t know anything, either. Maybe they keep churning out the same stale ads, with the same hackneyed scripts—“Stephen Harper. What’s his real agenda?”—not because they work, but because they can’t think of anything else.

Is it possible that an entire profession could get it wrong? Happens all the time. One of the “revelations” to come out of the financial crisis is how many people on Wall Street were operating on autopilot. They made their millions doing the same thing, in the same way, until they discovered that what they were doing was crazy. The same is true of doctors: studies show incidence patterns for many procedures, such as C-sections, bear no relationship to therapeutic value or need. It’s all just habit, custom and fad.

In the world outside politics, people understand the value of reputation. To be persuasive to others, it helps to have a reputation as a trustworthy, sensible person. Reputation is accumulated by repeated exposures through time. So we are obliged to be conscious of how our actions, advantageous as they may seem at any given moment, will be received later.

Political people, by contrast, appear to operate in a permanent year zero, without past or future. It is as if they never expect to run into the voters again. Attack ads and other sorts of bad behaviour, in consequence, are treated as if they were all upside. If they work, great. If they don’t, hey, no cost.

But in fact, there is a cost, even if they do “work”: a cost in reputation. Having attacked the Conservatives so many times before in such overheated terms, the Liberals find the public are disinclined to believe them, now that there is something of a real wolf to report.

Nor is the cost limited to one party or the other. The whole profession is degraded, to the point that people tune out of politics altogether. The comparison has been made before: if the airlines ran attack ads savaging each other’s safety records, nobody would fly on any of them.

But now let’s take a contrary example. One of the really great things newspapers and magazines do, for all our many, many faults, is to publish letters to the editor. Often these are extremely critical: a daily or weekly recounting of all the things we got wrong. Yet the effect, far from harming our credibility, is to enhance it.

Suppose Air Canada ran ads that said: here’s how many of our planes were late yesterday. And here’s what we’re doing to improve on that performance. Would that hurt their credibility, or help it? And if political parties did the same?

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  • Maureen

    Just is just the continuation of the 'hidden agenda' tact. Rather than develop actual policies, the LPC is still trying to find the hidden agenda – clearly there isn't one or the LPC is too inept to find out what it is – either way it is a useless activity for the LPC to be engaging in when they should be focusing on many, many other things – like what are their policies?

    By the time Parliament resumes (and essentially it is taking a 2 month break – big whoop), the budget is released and voted on – let's see if the Liberals and NDP are willing to risk an election. I doubt the Liberals are since they seem to be spending all their money on useless ads.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/DerekPearce DerekPearce

      If there is an election it will be because Harper/Flaherty will put some kind of unacceptable poison pill in the budget and force the opposition to vote it down. If these current poll numbers stay where they are (remains to be seen) then the government will be leery of pulling a stunt like that.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/CanadianSense CanadianSense

        Like the Political party subsidy that does Canadians want removed?

        • http://intensedebate.com/people/DerekPearce DerekPearce

          Do Canadians want them removed? Has that question been asked in a statistically accurate poll?

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/CanadianSense CanadianSense

            Yes, you still doubt my point?
            Page 3 of 9 Angus Reid Poll December 2, 2009

            http://www.scribd.com/doc/8727652/Ipsos-Reid-Poll…

            You can run a Poll ANYTIME and it wil always suggest a cut in politicians benefits salary is a good idea. ( Have you ever heard some suggest they need more money or benefits?

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/CanadianSense CanadianSense

            Yes, you still doubt my point?
            Page 3 of 9 Angus Reid Poll December 2, 2009

            http://www.scribd.com/doc/8727652/Ipsos-Reid-Poll…

            You can run a Poll ANYTIME and it wil always suggest a cut in politicians benefits salary is a good idea. ( Have you ever heard some suggest they need more money or benefits?

  • illbethejudge

    Andrew, you seem to have forgotten who devolved the political situation to nothing more than nasty attack ads. Ok, there was the "soldiers in our streets" ad by the Liberals which went way too far. But, Stephen Harper and his Conservatives are the kings of personal, negative, attacks ads even outside an election period. i hate that politics is reduced to this, don't get me wrong. I am one of those people who they don't work on. but, let's point the finger at who has really brought it down to a personal nasty level and who is keeping it there. at least these attack ads have a shred of truth to them, unlike that soldiers in the street ad and a whole host of personal attacks ads by the Conservatives against three Liberal leaders.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/andrewcoyne Andrew Coyne

      Agreed. The piece is about attack ads in general.

      • Avery

        I don't remember you having this problem when the Conservatives were attacking Stephane Dion's leadership. And having re-read your article you're wrong; your article is about the Liberal "attack ad" about the Conservatives.

        • Mulletaur

          That's funny, I was wondering the same durn thing.

        • http://intensedebate.com/people/andrewcoyne Andrew Coyne

          Oh lord. You don't remember. Did you look? Do any of you, ever, with your "I don't remembers"? Here is one example, easily discovered on the "Internet": http://andrewcoyne.com/2007/04/when-politician-sa… Took quite a bit of flak for it, as I recall, from partisan Tories, who accused me of overlooking far worse from the Liberals…

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/sea_n_mountains sea_n_mountains

            *booms lowers* whoops.

            hey, thirty seconds of googling the intertubes is a lot to as for before accusations fly!

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/Lord_Bob Lord Bob

            Andrew, people call you cynical, but when you try to rebut instinctive partisan slander by taking even a second out of your day to search through your old archives, you're showing a belief that you'll be able to change these people's minds with facts and data. People who view pretty much every phoneme of prose in terms of whether it's for or against their chosen "team".

            And that's almost charmingly optimistic of you.

          • Avery

            I did read those. IN one article you mention that Tories are taking aim at Dion, but it is merely to showcase the Conservative Media Headquarters and in the other you welcome Tory partisans and gently rib them. You're still a hack and I do watch you on TV. You're usually overshadowed by the talented Chantal Hebert. She has this unusual ability to report both sides of a story. Learn from her.

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/andrewcoyne Andrew Coyne

            No one who took the time to read either piece could possibly characterize them as you have. You are bang on about Chantal, though.

          • Avery

            I'm glad we agree. Let's not fight anymore.

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/andrewcoyne Andrew Coyne

            Good idea. I feel terrible about calling you a hack.

          • Mulletaur

            In neither case did you dissect the rationale behind the ads against Dion like you did here. You certainly didn't make any reference to appeals to the sympathetic nervous system. You are being disingenuous once again.

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/andrewcoyne Andrew Coyne

            Yes, and I didn't write about the Liberal ad, as I did about the Tories', that it "plays on the worst possible emotions, in the most divisive possible way. It is simply outrageous, all the more so for the sly and deceptive way in which it is inserted." I did not call the Liberal ad, as I did the Tories', "manipulative, inflammatory and tendentious." And I did not accuse Liberal partisans, as I did their Tory counterparts, of "a blithe sophistry, or an automaton-like literal-mindedness, that in either case I cannot begin to fathom."
            However, I am quite willing to do so now.

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/Crit_Reasoning Crit_Reasoning

            but I don't expect you to remember that, even now that I've told you.

            You can tell that Coyne has been patiently rebutting whiny partisans for decades. He speaks from experience.

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/novagardener novagardener

            I must confess I was unaware of your blog at the time AC. Unfortunatley, it has become accepted wisdom that attack ads work. But, I don't recall such blatant attacks against a leader of the opposition, outside a campaign period, as those from the current govt. IMHO, they crossed the line.

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/Rose21 Rose21

            Attack ads (or even just ads) outside of a campaign is at least in part due to the minority government circumstance. Minority government means you have to be defining yourself and the opposition all the time — and always ready for an election. My view is that ALL parties will use negative ads to their advantage — why not? Some ads, however, are just more convincing than others. If CPC's ad against Dion was effective, it is because it contained some element of truth that struck a chord with voters.

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/novagardener novagardener

            So obviously the LPC attack ad struck a chord as well as it too contained an element of truth – perhaps more so.

          • Rick

            To add to the reason for the success of the ads against Dion and even Ignatief: those "elements of truth" had been ignored by most of the media. The ads forced the media to report on that which they previously ignored. Namely that that Dion was "not a leader" and Ignatief was "just visiting" The media was, and mostly still is, negligent by ignoring these Liberal flaws so the conservatives are forced to spend their contributors money to tell the Liberal truth.

          • Grandma remembers

            I guess Preston Manning and Stockwell Day were fair game, they were a butt kicking Reform and upstart Alliance…how dare they run against the ruling party.

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/CanadianSense CanadianSense

            No I agree you attack all attack ads rather quickly. I still think they work.

          • knick

            How about in the three years since these two items? How about last year's 'just visiting' for a relevant comparison?

          • kimmy

            Putting down your readers makes you appear smaller than you look on the tube!

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/A_logician A_logician

            Andrew is only putting down those readers who don't read. I have found that he is gracious in admitting errors when he actually makes them.

          • Dot

            Some things are timeless. From the comments section of the second link, almost 3 years ago:

            Paul Wells:

            Boy, biff's an idiot, isn't he. And Charles: when Coyne links to examples of his outrage at Liberal ads, and you say he's only angry when Tories do it…well, how perfectly biff-like of you.
            4/03/2007

    • nonpartisan

      You obviously were not around for the Liberal onslaught on Reform candidates in the mid nineties. They were "Nazis", "fundamentalist Christians", didn't share Canadian Values (TM). Deb Grey was abused by the Liberals without conscience. Chretien used it on Day and his associates and Martin tried to use it on Harper but with less success the second time. This goes back to confederation politics which I don't expect you were around for.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/DerekPearce DerekPearce

        Except Day *is* a fundamentalist Christian and has explicitly stated he believes the earth is only 6000 years old. And his family has long been in close association with neo-Nazi defender Doug Christie. Deb Grey was made fun of by the Liberals because she went back on her promise not to take an MPs pension so was seen to be two faced about it.

  • Reader

    An obvious question, for me — where was this opinion piece when the Harper gang was so blatantly and dishonestly attacking their opponents?

    • Mulletaur

      Indeed. Inquiring minds want to know …

      • DPT

        you walked into that one didn't you? Coyne is playing chess….oh christ, you know the rest

  • Rex Ross

    Well written, Andrew. Cogent, persuasive argument. What's missing, however, is an allusion to the very great likelihood that the Tories (with their numbers falling and a whopping big bank balance) are going to retaliate in a big way. I haven't seen any reporting on this, but I'll bet that we will see all kinds of Tory advertising (along with feel-good Government of Canada ads) during the Olympic coverage. It wouldn't surprise me one bit if the Tories bought every ad they could for the broadcast of the men's hockey final.
    In short: these Liberal ads aren't the end of the story. The Tories are going to fight back. Hard. Perhaps you will write a similar commentary when they do.

    • http://www.freewebs.com/frgadupont Bobby Hawley

      I agree with Andrew. The Liberal ads are shocking. They don't know where to draw the line. Let's not try to suggest Nazi tactics, military in the streets, hidden agendas as well as the assassination of Harper. They are horrible ads. I've never seen a Tory add like these. There is more to fear from the lack of judgement of the Liberals .

  • BobbyB

    Since when is it an attack ad when facts are told? Is getting a message out that disagrees with you an attack? As for the reptilian part of the brain, every watch a TV commercial and then end up at the store for that sale? Hear how they make it sound great, how sincere they try and come across, how their tone is nowhere like the actual salesperson at the store? Rather than attacking the ad why not put into perspective that when truths are put out on the airwaves for the public at large to know that is good and when lies and spins are put out on the airwaves for the public at large to be mislead then that is bad. Was a coalition in Parliament last year wrong, illegal, not allowable, un-democratic and were Canadians not lied to in the Conservative rhetoric about traitors and deals made with seperatistrs that did nothing to help the electorate understand in democratically elected representatives. Were the Conservative ads right to stress that we did NOT vote for Dion, or Layton and therefore they could not be sworn in as PM if Parliament had No Confidence in Harper and the Conservatives? Where was your wisdom then when the Conservatives were feeding on the airwaves to the public misleading statements and out and out lies? Why then were those ads not analysed under your critique about our reptillian brains? Great that you pick and choose your examples but your analysis about these Prorogation ads which try to inform and enlighten people and crystalize the issue without misleading statements misses the mark substantially! Prorogation was blatantly mis-used by Harper in 2008 and again now in 2009. As for this latest Prorogation Harper could have Adjourned Parliament and kept the bills on the order papers and gained a break through the Olympics and come back in March with a better undertsanding of what his government needed to do about the financial structural deficit hole they dug. For you to be in your line of work and not be able to tell the difference between an ad that has spin and one that has non-spin is something I’m glad you let the public know!

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/novagardener novagardener

      Hear, hear.

      • http://www.freewebs.com/frgadupont Bobby Hawley

        How can so many people be so brainless. These ads are suggesting some kind of intrigue or conspiracy. Harper is just trying to get somthing done without the irrational partisan screaming of the Liberals. Just listening to them on a daily basis triggers the reptilian part of anyones brain.

  • cnd101

    The tories attacks were more relevant and they worked, they made a point to showcase Ignatieff as someone who doesnt connect with canada or canadians and they were right! And even though, I strongly disagree with Harper with proroguing parliament, these adds are so stupid are like little kindergarten kids trying to get even, what the liberals need to do is to change leaders ASAP because Ignatieff wont be elected and Harper will still be in no matter what.

    • some thoughts

      On the contrary. they created an image of someone who does not connect an image which exists only in . I may or may not vote for him but I have seen him speak and in person he connects at least as much as Mr. Harper. In fact his life experience is so much more varied than Harper's (who after all has never had a job outside politics or special interest groups) that he probably has a better appreciation of what its like to have a real job.

  • Guest

    Andrew, can you refresh my memory. What did you write about the Conservative attack ads when they went after Michael Ignatieff?

    There seems to be a big difference between the Liberal and the Conservative ads. The Liberals have questioned Harper's motivations behind something he did – proroguing Parliament. The Conservative attack ads were an ad hominem smear – going after Mr. Ignatieff for who he is or was, according to them.

    That's quite a difference.

    • some thoughts

      I was wondering if I was the only one who noticed that difference. There is a factual basis for the Liberal attack since Mr. Harper did prorogue without any apparent justification other than to cover his but. The Conservative "just visiting" ads had no such basis in fact that I can find. Ignatieff to my knowledge never has expressed an intention to return to teaching at Harvard. Indeed the stoicism with which he has put up with the gratuitous attacks prove that whatever the attack ads say about him, the opposite of what they claim is probably true.

  • Dick Richards

    I'm glad the liberals are finally diversifying beyond their base…it's a well known fact that the "reptile part of our brains" is bigger amongst conservative folk

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/andrewcoyne Andrew Coyne

    "Those in the game offer two standard defences. One, the other guys started it. This is invariably true: whatever sin one party may have committed, it can always find a precedent in its opponents. Which is handy, since it means neither side need justify its actions in its own right, but only by way of the other’s."

    • knick

      Perhaps you could remind me of the similarly scathing articles you wrote condemning the other guys' attack ads?

      • Gayle

        I suggest you read Coyne's comments above. He even posted links!

  • http://eugeneforseyliberal.blogspot.com EugeneForseyLiberal

    The commenters do realise that by using his one weekly print contribution to criticise Liberal ads, with helpful pictures of them, Coyne is publicising them and their argument, right?

    • http://eugeneforseyliberal.blogspot.com EugeneForseyLiberal

      PS. I was assuming Gwyn & others (Tribe?) were being cute by pretending to misunderstand satire of previous piece, so as to give more play, but judging from these comments, maybe not. Hard to tell difference between people playing dumb & being…excessively pedestrian.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/Crit_Reasoning Crit_Reasoning

        "Excessively pedestrian" is an excessively polite way to put it. ;-)

  • Will

    Andrew, great article. I always value your take on things. I hate these attack ads but compared with Ignatieff's Narnia commercials, these seem to be giving Liberals a little more hope (of course, public opinion on this matter has helped them the most).

    I also just wanted to say thanks for responding to some of the comments. I've noticed you do that a lot and I know it's appreciated by many of your readers. This is why I keep coming back to Macleans.ca

  • William Campbell

    Attack ads are probably more useless than some of the positive ads that the parties put out during a regular election campaign. We, the public ,have no faith in them and are really just as distracted by a good positive ad promising the world and heaven as well. The ads that I would like to see are ads describing the policies of the parties and explaining in clear and concise words how we will benefit from those policies. Otherwise 'put your money where your mouth is".
    Politics must change if we are to accept what the different parties stand for. I have been a Liberal, active and non active for over 55 years but because of that party's lack of policy and leadership to promote policy. I have now become reclusive and cannot support any party. I am as confused as the next guy as to how I will cast my ballot in the next federal election and for sure it would not be for the Harper led conservative party.

  • cjb

    Dear Andrew,

    How long (word count please) was your editorial on the last series of Conservative attack ads?
    Have you noticed that people are catching on to the propaganda promoting voter apathy – paint all potical parties with the same brush to protect one party?

  • Mike

    I can't agree more – raise the debate..engage Canadians and god knows what might happen!!!!!!!

    Better Candidates? Real debate on issues?

  • Thomas Brent

    Andrew, I certainly remember the Liberal ads about Nazis, soldiers in the streets and so on, just as I remember Tory Puffins pooping and so on. I wrote Dion when he was Leader asking him not to get dragged down into the gutter by Harper, but, unfortunately, the baser instinct in Canadians and especially the media, demonstrates that attack ads have some effect and so parties keep at it. The difference for me between the two parties is that Harper appealed to the ethnicist in many Canadians by laughing at Dion's English difficulties and the manner in which he stirred up Canadians, well mostly Albertans, against Quebec last year because of the potential coalition. He has an awful character: mean, divisive and, as he has demonstrated twice now, a cowardly bent. With any luck, he is simply visiting 24 Sussex.

    • Brian

      You actually see how Dion's english difficulties were treated as being different than how Manning's french was treated? If anything, Manning was attacked much more viciously.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/ChrisInKW ChrisInKW

    Emotional advertising is the most memorable, thus the most effective.

    • http://brianfrank.ca Brian Frank

      I don't think anyone doubts that. The question is, effective at *doing what* exactly — what's being remembered?

      Also, it's possible to make something emotional without making it negative. Most companies are able to make emotionally-resonant ads without suggesting their competitors are dangerous and evil — as Coyne pointed out.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/ChrisInKW ChrisInKW

        I've been trying to think of any "positive" emotions identified with by large segments of the population when considering shutting down Parliament to avoid democratic scrutiny but have come up dry. Any ideas?

        • http://brianfrank.ca Brian Frank

          A good place to start would be taking the time to engage with citizens in more open and genuine ways, re: discussing how to improve the culture and the system so things like this don't happen again.

          Commercial marketing is shifting towards openness, engagement, direct communication, co-creation, etc, and we're seeing that even simple gestures to make people feel recognized and involved can substantially increase loyalty and advocacy.

          People aren't just joining the Facebook thing because they're angry (and/or lazy), they're joining it to get immediate feedback (albeit the most superficial kind) and feel like they're a part of something. It won't amount to much in itself — but imagine if there was some organization and charisma backing it up…

          It's sadly ironic that democratic politics — which is presumably about openness, engagement, etc — is moving the other direction.

          We also need to avoid that temptation to keep starting from "year zero" [quoting the piece] every time something new happens. People need to start building positive narratives, not just figuring out which populist nerve to target this week.

  • Observant

    Stephen is nerdy cool … Iggy is soooo menacing … Conservatives are good for bad times … Liberals can't be trusted any more Canadians are knee-jerk jerks … so obvious.

  • http://brianfrank.ca Brian Frank

    Arguing about who started it is worse than a waste of time (I'm not just talking about attack ads but the retreat from substance & integrity in general). Saying "they did it first" perpetuates the cycle of blame.

    Let's see who starts the cycle of respect(ability)… Till then they're all the same.

    • Light On

      Yikes. It scares me to think that people actually think like this. It matters immensely who started it, at least to morality-based individuals. Was, say, Kuwait equally responsible for getting invaded by Iraq? Were the Jews equally responsible for the Holocaust? Guy A walks up to Guy B and starts punching him in the face for no reason, Guy B fights back; are they equally at fault? Of course not, you moral degenerate.

      "All the same"…that's an abdication of reason and morality, it makes me sick to my stomach that people like you infest my country.

      Canada: where "good judgment" is an oxymoron.

      • Jan

        The appeal to nausea – there's the higher ground we should be aiming for.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/PhilCP PhilCP

        Canyou clarify why it is so important to know who started using this type of negative advertising?

        • http://intensedebate.com/people/andrewcoyne Andrew Coyne

          Because this is exactly how Hitler started…

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/madeyoulook madeyoulook

            And Godwin goes off to cash yet another royalty cheque…

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/Ricard_S_Argent Richard_S_Argent

        "it makes me sick to my stomach that people like you infest my country."

        Such a charmer.

        • kcm

          a complete twat more like.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/BCerInToronto Jeff Jedras

    Another rule to remember: the media will always decry "attack" ads from their unique societal position of virtue and truthiness. And they'll decry as weak and a mistake anyone that decides to run only positive or issue ads instead of "attack" ads. This is called balance.

    • Jan

      They could refuse to carry them, if they really wanted to take a stand.

      • Rick

        The liberals have been guilty of the minor offense of running attack ads, like pointing a gun at voters and firing it (Chretien election). While the Conservatives have committed the unpardonable, democracy crushing, dictatorial, warmongering threat to Canadian Values of running attack ads like using Ignatief's own words. The real problem is not partisan posters, rather it is partisan press that routinely apologizes for Liberals while attacking Conservative .

  • http://www.pogge.ca skdadl

    So you guys watch the ads, eh?

    • Light On

      Conservatives stopped watching the teevee in 1998, the nonstop portrayal of white men as boobs, Canadian Tire Guy being the most egregious example, being too much to bear.

      We download emergency stashes of reality teevee shows from The Pirate Bay for when a chick comes over.

      • http://www.pogge.ca skdadl

        That's funny. Aging lefty hippy chick here, feminist for eons, but that's kind of what happened to me and TV too — maybe a little later, but by now, I mean, who needs it?

  • Mulletaur

    Oh, and I forgot to add : the intellect can and does often triumph over both emotions and instincts. 'Attack ads' don't kill debate, they stir it up. People are forced either to think things through and come to a different conclusion than what their emotions and instincts are telling them, or at the very least they are forced to rationalize their choices. To say otherwise, Coyne, is to characterize all electors as no better than beasts.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/andrewcoyne Andrew Coyne

      The reason most such ads don't work — did you even read the piece? — is precisely because the electorate are not beasts. It is the persistent tendency of the political class to treat them as such that I decry, not only because it is degrading, but because it is, contrary to the smirking assertions of those who profess to live in "the real world," ineffective.

      • Mulletaur

        Such ads do work. The "political class" knows this because they test the reactions on people before and after putting them into the public domain. Does anybody doubt that the Conservative ads against Dion were effective ? Can anybody disprove the effectiveness of PC ads against Dalton McGuinty in 1999 ? There are other examples. They don't keep doing the same thing over and over again for fun. They do it because it works.

        And people are not beasts because, despite appeals to their basic instincts, they are able to rise above such appeals and use their intellects to make 'rational' decisions (yeah, I know, 'rational', a whole other can of worms). But that doesn't mean that 'attacks ads' are any the less effective. It's just not a "see tiger, run like hell" reaction as you characterize it.

        I can't wait until the next round of Conservative 'attack ads' come out and all these things I have written here will be quoted back. Can't wait.

        • Dot

          My quicky online survey:

          Pepsi or Coke?

          Ever Ready or Duracell?

          Micky D's or Burger King?

  • http://siscoe.ca Siscoe

    Well, if this comment thread doesn’t illustrate at least one of Coyne’s points, I don’t know what will.

  • gar

    It is strange that Harper has won two minority governments with the Liberals saying he has a hidden agenda he got more seats second time round,This scare tactic will never work so they should try and let
    Canadians know why they should be government.Dion actually scared the hell out of Canadians and Iffy is showing he is not the common guys choice he visits universities because he has nothing in common with the ordinary worker who could not afford higher education but paid for a lot of these so called intellectuals education through taxes

    • Ryan

      The Liberals saved themselves from defeat in 2004 with the Secret Agenda ads, so they were certainly effective at that time. However, by 2006 the electorate had a longer look at Harper and were less inclined to buy into that fear tactic (among the many other factors that led to the change in power). But when Harper does stuff like proroguing, there might be something to be said, tactically, in reminding the electorate of the secret agenda undercurrent. It may have legs yet.

      The complex reality is that Harper's secret agenda isn't so secret – he wants to make Canada conservative – yet his tactics, policy-wise, have been liberal in order to gain support and keep power since Canada is a liberal country. More effective ads might be, he has no integrity; but even then I'm not sure how much resonance that line would have with the public since they don't think any politician has integrity.

  • KJH

    Why this criticism now, Andrew? Yes both sides can blame the other side for starting the negative ads, but by voicing your criticism today you are effectively attacking the Liberals only. Considering Stephen Harper's track-record of nasty, personal, negative ads against his opponents, I find your column extremely unfair.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Inkless Inkless

      It really never stops, does it. Time to unpack another truckload of steak knives.

      • kcm

        Has it ever occurred to you that you may be creating the demand?

  • Anne Streeter

    Attack ads, imported from the U.S. in a big way by Harper, are generally nasty & mean spirited but I think the Liberal ad in question is pretty tame in comparison to the personal attacks on Dion & Ignatieff of the Harper ads. The Libs had no choice but to fight back. This ad sticks to policy and is reasonably clever. I, for one, have to agree with it. I believe the Media generally has been seriously remiss and condescending to Canadians in assuming that they don’t care about the dismissal of Parliament & the reason for doing so – Harper’s dictatorial stonewalling on the Afghan detainee issue.

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