Biden spends big on re-election with $25 million ad buy in swing states amid flagging polls

President Biden’s re-election campaign is already spending big, splashing $25 million on an ad buy in swing states as poll numbers show dropping public confidence in his age, competence and electability.

The Biden 2024 campaign launched the 16-week ad blitz last month — well ahead of the timetable followed by his two immediate predecessors, former President Barack Obama and former President Donald Trump.

The Obama re-election campaign placed its first major ad buy in March 2012, while the Trump 2020 campaign went heavy on the airwaves in October of that election year.

Biden, the Democratic National Committee and their affiliates boasted a $77 million war chest at the end of the second quarter of this year, $23 million of which was raked in by the president’s re-election campaign, according to The Washington Post.

It’s unclear whether the campaign’s fundraising will be able to pay for the swing-state ads alone or whether they will have to dip into other committees’ funds, a source familiar with the matter told the outlet.


Biden campaign ad
President Biden’s campaign is spending big on re-election with a $25 million ad buy in swing states amid flagging poll numbers due to his age, competence and electability.
Biden for President

Biden campaign ad
The Biden campaign began the 16-week ad blitz in August to target swing-state voters — a move he is making well ahead of his predecessors, former President Barack Obama and former President Donald Trump.
Biden for President

Trump campaign senior adviser Chris LaCivita told the paper that the early may sound alarm bells for the commander-in-cihef.

“If you are the incumbent president and you are spending $25 million more than a year ahead, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out you have a problem and need to fix it,” he said.

Trump hauled in $53.8 million in the first half of 2023, and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who is polling in a distant second place to the former president, raised $20 million after launching his campaign in late May.


Biden campaign ad
The ad footage shows Biden glad-handing American workers at job sites.

“In a fragmented media environment, it’s more important than ever for our campaign to be investing early and aggressively across platforms to deliver our message where voters are,” Biden campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez said in a statement.

“While Republicans duke it out and burn cash fighting each other, our campaign is reaching our general election audience early and consistently — which is critical for winning in November 2024.”

The TV and digital advertising push comes as voters say they are skeptical of the 80-year-old president, with majorities of Democrats citing concerns about his mental ability and electability, according to a recent CNN poll.


Former President Donald Trump
“If you are the incumbent president and you are spending $25 million more than a year ahead, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out you have a problem and need to fix it,” a Trump campaign senior adviser said of the purchase.
Getty Images

Two-thirds of Democrats also believe the president is too old to serve a second term in office, a Wall Street Journal survey released last week shows.

The ads will air on CBS, CNN, MSNBC, Fox News, YouTube and streaming sites like Hulu in states including Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

One ad features a testimonial from a Wisconsin concrete worker who says Biden “helped the middle class” through laws that revitalized her industry. Others target Hispanic and black voters with similar economic messages.


Biden campaign ad
The ads will air on CBS, CNN, MSNBC, Fox News, YouTube and even streaming sites like Hulu in states such as Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona, North Carolina, Nevada and Georgia.
Biden for President

The footage shows Biden glad-handing American workers at job sites and appearing vigorous behind the Resolute desk in the Oval Office as he signs legislation.

Former Obama campaign media consultant Jim Margolis told The Washington Post the early ad spending gives Biden’s campaign “the opportunity to begin to tell their story, mostly without opposition advertising getting in their way.”

John Del Cecato, another former media consultant for Obama, also told the outlet it was a “gamble worth making” given the president’s low approval numbers, saying Biden “has got to kick it up a notch.”

A majority — 54.5% — of voters disapprove of Biden’s job performance, whereas 42% approve, according to the latest RealClearPolitics polling average.