Harris campaign launches $370M fall ad push in key battlegrounds

The Harris campaign announced that it was booking at least $370 million worth of television and online ads in key battlegrounds to run between Labor Day and the November election, Report informs referring to CNBC.

During the nine-week sprint leading up to Election Day, the Harris campaign is reserving $170 million in TV ads and $200 million for digital ads on platforms like Hulu, Roku, YouTube, Paramount, Spotify and Pandora.

Nearly a month since President Joe Biden dropped out of the race and endorsed Harris, she has been working to define herself to voters before former President Donald Trump does so first.

The Harris campaign's Saturday announcement is an effort to get first pick of ad spots ahead of the Republican presidential campaign.

"By reserving early, the Harris-Walz campaign is securing inventory during high-viewership moments like major sporting events and other national programs before they sell out," Harris' deputy campaign managers Quentin Fulks and Rob Flaherty wrote in a campaign memo.

Those prime-time spots include the season premieres of TV shows like ABC's "Grey's Anatomy" and the "Golden Bachelorette," along with live sports like NFL, WNBA, NBA, NHL and MLB games, the campaign said.

"Rates go up the closer you get to the air date, and there is also less inventory to choose from. So by buying later, Trump is spending more per ad buy and getting worse ad placements, particularly for high-viewership programming like live sports," Fulks and Flaherty added.

The Trump campaign rejected the idea that it needed to play catch-up with Harris and said that her campaign's new ad blitz is a case of overspending.

"Ads supporting President Trump are effectively being seen by more people than [Harris] ads, which proves her campaign is spending recklessly and frivolously because they have no clue on how to run a winning campaign," Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung said in a statement to CNBC.

The Harris campaign's choice to spend $30 million more on digital ads reflects a growing impulse for campaigns to go beyond the traditional TV ad model to reach voters in today's more fractured media environment.

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