EXCLUSIVE — The campaign arm of Senate Republicans is rolling out 22 digital ads across a majority of states up for reelection this November to promote President Donald Trump’s mega One Big Beautiful Bill Act passed last year by Republicans.
In a one-minute spot first seen by the Washington Examiner that will be altered to feature GOP candidates in each state, the National Republican Senatorial Committee is touting Republicans for having “delivered the largest tax cuts in history” and promoting some of the law’s most popular provisions, such as deductions for small businesses and no tax on tips, overtime, and Social Security.
The ads target safe Republican seats and most competitive races, including Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, and New Hampshire. Battleground Maine is excluded, with Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) having opposed the legislation.
“After four years of Democrat control that caused runaway inflation and rising costs, Senate Democrats were ready to allow a $4.5 trillion tax hike on American working families,” NRSC Communications Director Joanna Rodriguez said in a statement. “Thankfully, President Trump and Senate Republicans took action to deliver historic tax cuts that ensure Americans keep more of their paychecks this tax season.”
Officially dubbed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, Republicans rebranded the law as the Working Families Tax Cuts to address struggling approval ratings heading into the midterm elections.
Senate Democrats’ campaign arm, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC), blamed the “GOP’s toxic agenda” for inflation, higher prices at the pump, and rising out-of-pocket healthcare costs.
REPUBLICANS ROLL OUT FIRST AD PINNING DEMOCRATS FOR NOT STANDING DURING STATE OF THE UNION
“Voters across the country have been loud and clear that Republicans are making life harder and more expensive,” DSCC spokesman Joe Bush said in a statement. “Republicans sold out working families, and in November, voters will hold the GOP accountable for the damage they’ve done.”
The NRSC ads use AI-generated b-roll — a common feature of NRSC ads this cycle — but feature real footage of candidates from each state.
















