Attacks adding up in 17th District

Bustos campaign says GOP ads twisting facts

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Attack advertisements like these against 17th Congressional District candidates Cheri Bustos, a Democrat, and U.S. Rep. Bobby Schilling, a Republican, aren’t necessarily any more nasty than those of earlier times, said Scot Schraufnagel, assistant professor of political science at Northern Illinois University. But there’s certainly a lot more of them than there used to be, he said.
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The National Republican Congressional Committee also has criticized Bustos for voting to approve a $40,000 electronic sign, which it calls the “Bustos Billboard.” It is used to promote local events.

Katie Prill, a spokesman for the committee, said Republicans wanted to highlight Bustos’ record.

“Will she explain why the $40,000 sign and the $625,000 road were priorities when her community was suffering high unemployment?” Prill siad. “She raised taxes on her community to connect her home to the country club. That’s not what the people of the 17th Congressional District want.”

Responding to the ads

Schilling spokesman Jon Schweppe said in an interview this week that questions about the country club advertisements should be directed to the National Republican Congressional Committee.

But on Wednesday night, a country club advertisement began with Schilling saying: “I’m Bobby Schilling, and I approve this message.”

The ad said Bustos voted many times for tax increases and for the $625,000 road.

“Her record in East Moline was one of raising taxes and raising fees repeatedly,” Schweppe said during the interview. “The parkway costs $625,000. Meanwhile, she was raising property taxes and sewer fees and garbage fees.”

Bustos spokesman Arden Manning defended his candidate.

“The key thing with the road, it started before she was on City Council,” Manning said.

Many of the ads imply Bustos is linked to the country club, a claim her campaign says is patently false.

“The only club Cheri has been a part of is the Y,” Manning said. “They know it’s not true.”

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