Gillibrand claims Trump's "broken promises" in its first TV commercial for 2020



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Senator Kirsten Gillibrand accuses President Trump of keeping broken promises in the first television advertisement of his Democratic presidential candidacy.

Behind the polls, the senator from the New York campaign announced Tuesday what they called "the first anti-Trump TV commercial of the 2020 presidential cycle."

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Gillibrand employees said the 30-second "I Promise" spot will be broadcast on cable and digital TV this week in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, media markets; Cleveland and Youngstown, Ohio; and Detroit, Lansing and Flint, Mich. These media markets are a reflection of Gillibrand's campaign tour in the three Rust Belt states.

Pennsylvania, Ohio and Michigan – won by former President Barack Obama in the 2008 and 2012 elections – went from blue to red in 2016, helping Trump to win the White House.

The advertisement highlights what Gillibrand calls Trump's broken promises on job restoration in the manufacturing sector, the reduction of prescription drug prices and the construction of national infrastructure.

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The ad begins with a Trump excerpt from the 2016 presidential campaign and says, "If I'm elected, you will not lose a plant, you'll have plants coming in. You're going to have jobs again. . "

The spot then uses a Trump clip saying "you'll see drug prices fall dramatically, I promise," followed by a third clip of Trump's swearing "we're going to build the next generation of roads, bridges and of railways, I promise you. "

The words "NO MORE BROKEN PROMISES" then flash on the screen before Gillibrand only points out in a clip that "as president, I will take care of the fights that no one else will do."

The Gillibrand campaign tells Fox News that five people are spent advertising for two days on cable TV and digital.

The senator, who launched her candidacy for the White House in January, struggled to get elected while she tried unsuccessfully – so far – to stand out from the vast historical pool of nearly twenty candidates for the democratic presidency.

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