Conservative group buys ads against Democrat

FILE - In this Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2012 file photo, Nevada Senate Majority Leader Steven Horsford, D-Nev., speaks to supporters after winning the new 4th Congressional District in Las Vegas. Crossroads GPS, a national conservative group, are buying $820,000 in ads against Horsford, who's favored to win. (AP Photo/John Gurzinski, File)

FILE - In this Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2012 file photo, Nevada Senate Majority Leader Steven Horsford, D-Nev., speaks to supporters after winning the new 4th Congressional District in Las Vegas. Crossroads GPS, a national conservative group, are buying $820,000 in ads against Horsford, who's favored to win. (AP Photo/John Gurzinski, File)

LAS VEGAS — A national conservative group said Tuesday it is buying $820,000 in TV ads aimed at a heavily favored incumbent Democrat in a large, diverse Nevada congressional district.

Crossroads GPS is placing ads targeting Rep. Steven Horsford that will run from Wednesday through Election Day in the Las Vegas area. Spokesman Paul Lindsay said the spots will communicate the group’s message and did not elaborate.

Horsford called the TV blitz an outside attempt to buy his House seat. Crossroads GPS, which airs issue ads and does not disclose its donors, was co-founded by GOP operatives Karl Rove and Ed Gillespie.

“Karl Rove and his anonymous billionaire backers know nothing about Nevada’s 4th Congressional District,” Horsford said. “He does not care about Nevada; he is making a buy because he thinks we are numbers on a spreadsheet.”

The purchase has Democrats puzzled. Horsford has raised five times the campaign cash as his Republican opponent Cresent Hardy. In addition, the 4th Congressional District leans Democratic, with 43 percent of active voters registered as Democrats; 32 percent as Republican; and 19 percent registered nonpartisan.

The district includes urban North Las Vegas and wide swaths of rural Nevada stretching to Yerington and Ely in the north.

Hardy, a two-term Nevada assemblyman, also has been on the defensive after concurring with Mitt Romney’s infamous “47 percent” comment in a recent town hall in Mesquite. Romney was widely criticized during his 2012 presidential campaign after saying 47 percent of voters don’t pay income taxes and believe they are victims.

After the videotaped comments came to light, Hardy issued a statement noting that he grew up on a ranch and has “never been slick or polished.”

Horsford’s campaign has been relatively low-key. He recently unveiled TV ads in the Las Vegas market focusing on his accomplishments during his first term in Congress, such as ushering bills through the House that secure federal land in Northern Nevada for local development and co-leading a caucus supporting a proposed Interstate 11 between Las Vegas and Phoenix.

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