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Giffords Group's Radio Ads Hit McConnell, Ayotte On Gun Vote

Former Arizona congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and husband Mark Kelly at an April 16 ceremony naming a Capitol Hill conference room for her aide, Gabe Zimmerman, who died in the same Tucson, Ariz., shootings that left her wounded.
Saul Loeb
Former Arizona congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and husband Mark Kelly at an April 16 ceremony naming a Capitol Hill conference room for her aide, Gabe Zimmerman, who died in the same Tucson, Ariz., shootings that left her wounded.

Former Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and her husband, Mark Kelly, at an April 16 ceremony naming a Capitol Hill conference room for her aide Gabe Zimmerman. Zimmerman died in the same Tucson, Ariz., shootings that Giffords wounded.
Saul Loeb
Former Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and her husband, Mark Kelly, at an April 16 ceremony naming a Capitol Hill conference room for her aide Gabe Zimmerman. Zimmerman died in the same Tucson, Ariz., shootings that Giffords wounded.

After the Senate failed to pass bipartisan legislation to expand background checks for gun purchases, the superPAC created by shooting victim and former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and her husband, onetime astronaut Mark Kelly, vowed to remind voters of which lawmakers voted against the plan.

On Wednesday, Americans for Responsible Solutions made good on that pledge by launching radio ads against two Republican senators: Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Senate minority leader; and New Hampshire's Kelly Ayotte, who is in her first term.

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The ad against McConnell starts with fragments of news reports from December of the Newtown, Conn., elementary school shootings. A female narrator says:

"We watched. We listened. We felt it. Newtown. But Sen. McConnell won't listen to us."

The anti-Ayotte ad has two female actors talking in a noisy coffee shop.

FIRST WOMAN: "Remember that ad Kelly Ayotte ran saying she's one of us?"

SECOND WOMAN: "Oh, where she's out for a run?"

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FIRST WOMAN: "Yeah. ... Well, it sure didn't take long for her to 'go Washington.' ... Ayotte voted against improving background checks to keep guns out of the hands of criminals."

SECOND WOMAN: "Are you serious? Eighty-nine percent of the people in New Hampshire support universal background checks. She just ignored us?"

The Giffords superPAC said the Kentucky ads are running in Louisville and Lexington, and the New Hampshire ads are running in Concord, Manchester and Keene.

"As Gabby said last week, if we can't keep our communities safer with the Congress we have, we will work to change Congress," Americans for Responsible Solutions Executive Director Pia Carusone said in a statement.

McConnell is up for re-election in 2014. Ayotte doesn't face voters again until 2016.

McConnell campaign manager Jesse Benton said: "Sen. McConnell commends Gabby Giffords for her courage and perseverance but in Kentucky we have a fundamental disagreement with a gun control agenda. President Obama's allies have been attacking Mitch on this issue for months but his support for Kentuckians' Second Amendment rights will not waver."

While four Democratic senators also voted against the measure, it didn't go unnoticed that they were spared the group's negative ads, at least for now. And two of the four -- Mark Begich of Alaska and Mark Pryor of Arkansas -- face re-election next year. Max Baucus of Montana announced on Tuesday that he would not seek a seventh term in 2014. The fourth Democratic no vote was newly elected Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota.

In an emailed response to why Democrats were not singled out in the ads, ARS spokeswoman Jen Bluestone didn't directly answer the question:

"We're thanking Democrats and Republicans. A solution supported by 90 percent of Americans isn't a partisan issue. We're going to support those who listened to their constituents and make sure that we educate those voters whose elected representatives ignored them."

Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit www.npr.org.