Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Al Franken has someone taking serious shots at him on network and cable TV and the Web -- and it's not Republican Sen. Norm Coleman.
DFLer Priscilla Lord Faris, a last-minute, little-known primary challenger, has come out with a biting ad that aims at Franken's softest spots -- his sometimes dicey humor and past business tax troubles -- in a harder fashion than has his GOP opponent.
In the low-budget ad, which features only her, Lord Faris tells viewers that while she once thought Franken could defeat Coleman, "his record of pornography and degradation of women and minorities and questionable financial transactions will be the source of blistering ads for the Republican attack machine."
Lord Faris is referring to a piece that Franken wrote for Playboy in 2000 and bits of humor regarding women and minorities that he's told or written over the years.
Franken spokesman Andy Barr declined to comment Wednesday on the specifics of the ad or Lord Faris' candidacy, saying, "We're thoroughly focused on Norm Coleman."
DFL Party co-chair Donna Cassut said the party "has endorsed Al Franken, and Democrats across Minnesota are united in rallying around Al for our fight for change."
Franken has tried to put the controversies behind him, even publicly apologizing to delegates at the DFL state convention for material they may have found inappropriate.
Republicans have stayed on the attack. Lord Faris entered the race late but has pulled fewer punches than the GOP in her assault on her party's endorsee. The tactic has gotten notice among DFLers.