Democrats outspend Republicans two-to-one in Georgia Senate runoff ad wars

If Republican nominee Herschel Walker loses in Tuesday’s Georgia Senate runoff election against Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock, one contributing factor will be a lack of air cover.

In the month-long campaign battle in Georgia, Warnock and allied Democratic outside groups outspent Walker and GOP aligned groups by a roughly two-to-one margin.

The margin was $57.2 million for Democrats to $27.3 million for Republicans, according to data from Nov. 9-Dec. 5 provided by AdImpact, a nationally known ad tracking firm.

The biggest spender was the Warnock campaign, at $27.3 million, compared to just $11.5 million by Walker’s team. Campaigns get more bang for their bucks than outside groups such as super PACs when it comes to TV commercial rates.

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Helping to fuel the disparity was the ferocious fundraising by Warnock — who easily out raised Walker during both the general election and runoff campaigns.

The Democrats domination in the ad wars vastly accelerated during the runoff contest.

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“During the general, Dem advertisers made up 53% of total spending. During the runoff, that number grew to 68%,” AdImpact tweeted.

AdImpact noted that 59% of all spending during the runoff was placed on broadcast television. 

Two years ago, Warnock, the minister at Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church, where Martin Luther King, Jr. once preached, and now-Sen. Jon Ossoff swept Georgia’s twin Senate runoff elections, handing the Senate majority to the Democrats.

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This time around, the Senate majority has already been decided, but whether the Democrats grab some breathing room in their razor-thin control of the chamber is on the line in the last ballot box showdown of the 2022 midterm elections.

This year’s runoff was necessitated after Warnock led Walker — a former college and professional football star — by roughly 37,000 votes out of nearly 4 million cast in November’s general election. However, since neither candidate topped 50% of the vote required by Georgia law to secure victory, the race headed to a runoff.

According to AdImpact, $84.5 million has already been spent to run ads in the runoff. That brings to over $376 million spent this cycle in Georgia’s Senate election, making it the most expensive race across the country in the 2022 election cycle.

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