For years, parents have been warning their college-age children to be careful what they post on social media.Now, one young candidate is learning this important lesson the hard way — everything you post can and will be used against you in politics.Jon Ossoff, 30, is running as a Democrat in a special election in Georgia. But the Congressional Leadership Fund, a superPAC aligned with GOP leadership, launched an attack ad Wednesday hitting him with some unflattering college footage. It includes a clip of him dressed as Han Solo in a Star Wars parody of the school's alcohol policy. It's an effort to paint Ossoff as a "spoiled frat boy" and undercut his experience on Capitol Hill in a race taking place in a conservative state.The ad marks a new era in politics. Many under the age of 35 live their lives on social media. It's ubiquitous. In years past, opposition researchers would have to dig deep to hope for leaked videos or testimony from former friends, rivals and roommates. Now, they don't have to go much farther than Google or the photos section of Facebook pages.The clips of Ossoff are easily accessible via YouTube from his college a capella group, the Georgetown Chimes. Another clip shows them singing a parody of Billy Joel's "Uptown Girl," with the lyrics, "Georgetown girl. You know she's living in her M Street world. She never tires of her high-class toys."The $1.1 million buy from the leadership fund runs through the April 18 all-party primary to replace former Rep. Tom Price, who resigned to become President Trump's secretary of health and human services.Price's suburban Atlanta seat has emerged as a rare opportunity for Democrats — in a district that went from voting for Mitt Romney by 24 points to one Trump carried by only 1. Democrats hope to capitalize on backlash against the president to pull off an upset.If no candidate reaches 50 percent, the top two finishers, regardless of party, will advance to a June 20 runoff. The heavy investment from the superPAC also shows Republicans are taking the race seriously and are worried about Ossoff's early momentum.Ossoff has become a somewhat unlikely candidate for Democrats. He's a documentary filmmaker who previously worked as a legislative aide on national security issues for Rep. Hank Johnson, D-Ga. The congressman threw his support behind Ossoff, as did neighboring Democratic Rep. John Lewis.With the attention of progressive blog Daily Kos and social media shoutouts from Hollywood celebrities like Kristen Bell and Debra Messing, he has already raised $2 million. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has paid for nine staffers on the ground to help out, but the district likely remains an uphill climb for the party.The message the superPAC ad is trying to show is clear — that during the five years Ossoff worked for Johnson, some of which he was still studying at Georgetown, he was still an immature kid.Johnson disputed that in a statement:
Attack Ad Marks New Era For Millennials Running For Office
