The National Republican Senatorial Committee is pulling television advertisements that support a Michigan Republican, signaling that the party may have lost faith in their candidate with just a month left until the midterm elections.
The national group pulled ads in the state worth more than $850,000,The Hill reported on Tuesday. The media blitz was originally planned to support the state’s former Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land, the Republican running against Democrat Rep. Gary Peters to fill a Senate seat left by retiring Democratic Sen. Carl Levin.
Peters is leading in nearly all the polls taken in this election cycle. In the latest CBS News/New York Times/YouGov poll, he was leading by 5 points, with a margin of error of 2 points.
This may sound familiar to Michigan voters: in 2004, John McCain pulled his resources, staff, and advertising out of the state a month ahead of his election, presuming it a lost state. A month later, Obama won 57% of the state.
Republicans deny the decision was made because Land is trailing in the polls.
“The suggestion that the campaign is struggling is ridiculous, this is an extremely competitive race which is why Gary Peters has run one of the most negative campaigns in the country,” NRSC spokesman Brook Hougesen told msnbc in an email, noting that ad buys are handled by the NRSC Independent Expenditure Committee.
That committee told msnbc that it’s actually because outside groups are spending so heavily for Land.









