DES MOINES, Iowa – On a recent visit to the Iowa State Fair, control of the Senate boiled down to a fight between two opposing camps: people in chicken suits versus people in corn suits. Such are the indignities of running in one of the most competitive – and crucial – races of 2014.
Democrats this year are on defense in seven Senate contests in states that voted for Mitt Romney in 2014, all of them difficult races. Republicans need only six more seats to retake the Senate. With such a small margin for error, a loss for Democrats in swing state Iowa, which backed Barack Obama in both 2008 and 2012, would make it incredibly difficult for the party to maintain their majority.
That’s why the Senate race here between Democratic Rep. Bruce Braley and GOP State Sen. Joni Ernst is one of the most closely watched this year. The non-partisan Cook Report recently upgraded Iowa to a toss-up from “lean Democratic” and outside groups are pouring cash into attack ads and turnout operations to try to move the needle. An NBC News poll last month found the candidates tied at 43%.
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At the state fair, the crowd for Braley began taking their seats more than an hour before he arrived, despite the pouring rain. When the four-term congressman finally took the small stage at the Des Moines Register Soapbox, the fair’s annual rallying spot for politicians, he was showered with chants of “Go, Bruce, Go!”
But it wasn’t just supporters there to greet him. There was also a man dressed as a rooster, sporting a sign that said “Bruce Braley cares about CHICKENS more than VETERANS” — a reference to a dispute between Braley and a neighbor over whether she should be allowed to keep “therapeutic” pet chickens. The GOP operative who surfaced the story, Jeff Patch, trailed the candidate handing out foam chicken toys and hoping (in vain) that he would pass the chicken coops on his tour of the fair’s livestock. A handful of young activists with Americans for Prosperity, a group backed by the billionaire Koch brothers that plans to spend $300 million nationally this year, also followed Braley with a person in a pig costume waving anti-Obamacare signs.
Photos: Pork and Politics Mingle at the Iowa State Fair
The next morning, Ernst took the same stage to similarly enthusiastic chants of “Go, Joni, Go!” Like Braley, she also had some less supportive company in the audience. Two people arrived dressed as giant ears of corn, mocking Ernst’s waffling on whether ethanol subsidies – which Iowa politicians from both parties say are critical to farmers — should exist. About a dozen activists with NextGen, the environmental group backed by billionaire Tom Steyer that recently launched a $2.6 million ad campaign targeting Ernst, waved “Oil Companies For Joni” signs. Ernst supporters moved in to cover them with their own campaign signs to keep them out of photos of her speech.
The contest here to replace Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin, who’s retiring after five terms, is hardly the only one to attract colorful protests. But the antics also reflect the direction the contest is headed: Each candidate is trying to win by turning the other into an ugly caricature.
Ernst’s side wants to paint Braley as an effete trial lawyer more comfortable at a Washington fundraiser than an Iowa barnyard. Braley’s side is selling Ernst as an extremist Sarah Palin acolyte more concerned with bomb throwing than governance. Control of the Senate may depend on which of these two cartoonish profiles can sink in.
‘Out of touch’
Speaking with msnbc in a coffee shop in downtown Des Moines, Braley, 56, described himself as a populist whose values were forged growing up in a working class family in tiny Brooklyn, Iowa. His first ad of the campaign featured his mother talking about how the family struggled financially after Braley’s father was injured working at a grain elevator.
“My parents grew up on Iowa farms during the Great Depression, so they taught me a lot about economic hardship,” he told msnbc. “I got my first job working in 3rd grade delivering the Des Moines Tribune and I basically have had a job almost ever since then.”
But Republican opposition researchers have done an impressive job putting their own image of Braley into the mix. In March, the GOP super PAC America Rising posted a video of Braley warning donors that Chuck Grassley, the state’s popular Republican senator, could become the chairman of the Judiciary Committee if Republicans retake the Senate even though he was “a farmer from Iowa who never went to law school.”
Braley apologized for the remark, but it helped lay the foundation for more attacks depicting him as the elitist embodiment of everything people hate about attorneys.
“He’s out of touch,” David Kochel, an adviser to Ernst, told msnbc. “He may have grown up in a small town but he traded in the work boots for the tasseled loafers as a lawyer.”
Trying to make the farmer episode stick, the National Republican Senatorial Committee passed around an old video of Braley aggressively questioning a witness’s academic credentials in a health care hearing. Republicans have also reminded everyone of the time Braley talked about the House gym’s lack of towel service during the government shutdown. And last month the story of how Braley and his wife filed a complaint with their local homeowner’s association over their neighbor’s pet chickens hit the press.
While Patch’s initial write-up claimed Braley “threatened litigation” in the case, Braley strongly denied the dispute went that far.
“It’s absolutely false,” Braley told msnbc. “I never threatened a lawsuit. Never. And anyone who claims that I did isn’t being truthful.”
Now Republican groups are attacking Braley’s commitment to the troops. Concerned Veterans For America, another Koch-backed organization, is running a TV ad jumping off a Des Moines Register report that Braley missed a hearing on veterans care the same day he attended three fundraisers. Buried in the story was the fact that Braley didn’t miss the hearing to attend fundraisers — he was at an oversight hearing on the Fast and Furious gun program scheduled at the same time. But with the scandal around wait times at Veterans Affairs hospitals in the news, Republicans are seizing on his light attendance record to accuse him of being asleep at the wheel.
It’s an especially frustrating line of attack for Braley, who has long considered veterans care one of his signature issues. He noted to msnbc that on the same day being highlighted in the CVFA ad, he attended a separate hearing on veterans’ jobs and greeted an Honor Flight of World War II and Korean War veterans from Iowa. Asked by msnbc to name his proudest achievement in Congress he immediately cited a law he introduced and passed in 2012 that expanded a housing grant program for injured veterans. It was named after Andrew Connolly, an Iraq War veteran in Dubuque, Iowa who Braley helped apply for a grant to move into a wheelchair-accessible home.
The legislation, Braley said, “started out as a constituent service that turned into great public policy that’s helping wounded warriors today get the benefits they deserve.”
Democrats were favored to win the Iowa race early on, but Braley’s penchant for “shooting himself in the foot,” as one national Democratic operative put it to msnbc, has stoked worries that the party might face an upset. Braley recently replaced his top ad-maker and pollster.
This kind of thing isn’t supposed to happen to Democratic candidates, whose most potent weapon in recent cycles has been their dull consistency. While Republican nominees have a tendency to self-immolate in races they’re favored to win, Democrats have done so only rarely.
This contrast accounts almost entirely for the current Democratic majority: Without Republican Sen. George Allen’s “macaca” moment, Democrats wouldn’t have retaken the Senate in 2006. Without disastrous GOP candidates in 2010 including Christine O’Donnell and Sharron Angle, Democrats wouldn’t have held the Senate that year. Without Todd Akin and Richard Mourdock’s remarks about rape in 2012, Democrats would barely have a chance of keeping it today. The only equivalent Democratic implosion was Martha Coakley’s loss to Scott Brown in a special election in Massachusetts in 2010.
But Braley isn’t the only one fending off a slew of attack ads. Democrats think Ernst’s own vulnerabilities give them a strong shot at hanging onto the seat.
For someone whom Democrats have labeled a tea party flamethrower, Ernst, 44, couldn’t have picked a less controversial topic during her visit to the state fair.
Taking the stage at the Soapbox, Ernst told the crowd she wouldn’t be delivering a “political” speech.
“I am going to take my time on this soapbox to talk about something that I feel is very, very important…those brave men and women who serve in our United States Armed Forces,” she said.
From there, she launched into a tale about her time in the Iowa Army National Guard, boasting how her unit earned the respect of officers in Kuwait by working in “142 degree Fahrenheit weather, in 95% humidity, in full gear.” It was an inspiring story, although it’s worth noting that the hottest temperature ever recorded on Earth was 134 degrees.









