If you go back to our story on Tuesday titled, “Alan Grayson goes after Patrick Murphy’s voting record in web ad,” you won’t be able to click on the video located at the bottom of the post.
That’s because the web ad has been pulled from YouTube.
Politico’s Marc Caputo, who broke the story this morning, reports that a YouTube spokesperson would only confirm that the Grayson campaign had taken down the ad.
Grayson and Murphy are the top two contenders in the race for the Democratic nomination for Senate, and have been going hard at each other early on, with the primary still more than a year away.
The now deleted ad featured the Schoolhouse Rock song “I’m Just a Bill,” and claimed that Murphy, a second-term Congressman first elected in 2012, hasn’t passed any bills out of the House of Representatives in his time in office.
Last week PolitiFact Florida ruled that “false,” writing that Murphy had a hand in at least two items coming out of committee in 2013: One bill became an amendment, and he co-authored a second that became law. A third bill that Murphy sponsored moved out of committee as an amendment in 2015.
Grayson has prominently discussed his success in getting bills and amendments passed in Congress on the campaign trail.
“This irresponsible and false attack from Alan Grayson is everything that’s wrong with Washington, putting political point-scoring above working together to get things done. But what’s even worse is that Grayson now wants to duck all responsibility for launching it, avoiding comment for deleting it less than one day later. Democrats — and all Floridians — deserve much better,” said Murphy campaign spokesman Joshua Karp.
Grayson spokesman Kevin Franck did not respond for a request for comment.