ATLANTA - With the election still six months away, Gov. Roy Barnes launched the first in a planned series of statewide television ads Monday that will make him a fixture on the small screen through the fall. <br>
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Powered by an $11 million warchest, the campaign will have a ``substantial and sustained'' presence on the air until election day, said Barnes' manager, Tim Phillips. <br>
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Though Barnes has no announced opposition in his own party, he will face a Republican in the November general election. Three GOP candidates are battling for the right to challenge him. <br>
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``It's going to be Barnes 24-7,'' laughed Sen. Eric Johnson of Savannah, the state Senate Republican leader. <br>
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Phillips said the ads are pre-emptive. <br>
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``This governor has been committed to progress, he's been aggressive, he's been an activist governor. There are people and groups who have opposed his agenda who are going to try to convey their point of view,'' he said. ``We've got to get out there and communicate who Roy Barnes is, the reason he's done what he's done, what he intends to do for the future.'' <br>
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The three ads which began airing Monday all take a soft-sell approach to cast Barnes as ``a practical, problem-solving governor rooted in the best traditions of the past, but guiding improvements for the future,'' said Emory University political science professor Merle Black. <br>
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``He's certainly picturing himself as a reformer ... and leaving as little room as possible for Republicans to criticize him,'' said Mel Steeley, a history professor at the State University of West Georgia. <br>
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All three ads begin with a small-town, family values theme and either doo-wop or bluegrass music, saying Barnes learned about life and business from running a vegetable stand in front of his family's general store. <br>
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Two of them focus on the education law he pushed through the Legislature, saying he ``stood up to powerful education bureaucrats'' to demand improvement. <br>
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Another, geared to south Georgia, cites Barnes' ``One Georgia'' program as helping bring jobs to poorer counties. That ad, which features a mule, begins with an announcer saying: ``His daddy was a farmer, mule trader and ran a general store that sold everything from guns to horse bridles and seeds.'' <br>
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In the other two ads, a shot of Barnes' general store in Mableton shows the signs ``ammo'' and ``hunting'' on the front of the building. <br>
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Barnes had the endorsement of the National Rifle Association in his 1998 race. <br>
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``This is a way to say that he's home grown, he has values everyone would honor but he's working to improve the state,'' said Black, the Emory University political scientist. ``He's mixing these kind of liberal themes with conservative themes. The result is to position himself as a centrist candidate.'' <br>
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Black said he sees Barnes in a strong position for re-election and expressed surprise he started his media campaign so early in the season. <br>
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But he added that Democrats ``have got a lot riding on this race. The way they've redrawn election district lines, they're looking for huge Democrat gains in every instance ... I think they're trying to get this huge victory, and Barnes becomes known nationally as the architect of Democratic Party improvement in the state of Georgia.'' <br>
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Johnson said he sees the ads as a sign that Barnes ``is going to try and be a populist again and defend his big-government solutions.''
http://accesswdun.com/article/2002/4/195407
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