Considering the plethora of Establishment Republicans and former GOP opponents who have hurled over-the-top invective against Donald Trump, it is not hard to imagine the Hillary Clinton campaign ads that will blanket the airwaves this fall.

Actually, we don’t have to imagine them. The former secretary of state already has experimented with the format online.

Franz said the saving grace for Trump is that Clinton and her husband Bill have provided their opponents with plenty of ammunition over the years.

An ad released in May on Twitter features a Facebook post by 2012 GOP nominee Mitt Romney calling on Trump to release his tax returns: “It is disqualifying for a modern-day presidential nominee to refuse to release tax returns to the voters.”

Another ad later that same month features clips of one Republican after another trashing Trump. Romney called him a “phony” and criticized his “absurd third-grade theatrics.” Sen. Marco Rubio called him a “con artist” and “the most vulgar person ever to aspire to the presidency.” Sen. Ted Cruz called him a “bully,” “utterly amoral,” and “a narcissist at a level I don’t think this country’s ever seen.” And Jeb Bush said Trump was a man in need of therapy and whose bombast is “a sign of deep insecurity and weakness.”

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Experts on political advertising said Trump can expect more of the same.

“It will be something she’ll continue to use — probably should use, if she’s not planning to — to use these statements throughout the general election,” said Michael Franz, a political science professor at Bowdoin College in Maine and the co-director of the Wesleyan Media Project.

Christopher Devine, a political scientist at the University of Dayton, said Clinton has a bounty of clips from Republicans to help make her case.

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“The Republican candidates — and actually, not even just the candidates, but other Republicans from the never-Trump camp, as well — have had about as harsh a thing you can say about someone who gets the nomination to their party,” he said. “It’s not just coming from one faction.”

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Devine predicted Clinton will continue to use Romney and Trump’s erstwhile rivals for the nomination and could sprinkle in new comments, such as House Speaker Paul Ryan’s recent pronouncement that the nominee’s criticism of the Hispanic judge handling the Trump University civil case was was the “textbook definition of a racist comment.”

To some extent, Devine said, it is a staple in every election for campaigns to use quotes from politicians on the the other side to advance their argument. But for Clinton’s strategists, he said, “There’s just more material to work with.”

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Franz said barbs from a candidate’s own party can be more powerful than criticisms from the other side.

“I don’t think we know if they’re more effective advertisements, but intuitively, it makes sense that it would be,” he said.

Devine agreed. “My gut would be, yes, it is more effective,” he said.

Franz said the Clinton campaign team has a sophisticated micro-targeting operation capable of putting certain ads in front of certain audiences. Ads featuring Republican voices might work well with wavering Republicans or conservative-leaning independents.

Franz predicted Democrats will not stop with anti-Trump ads. Operatives for other Democrats will likely try to use the words of other Republicans to tie Trump to GOP candidates in vulnerable districts. He compared it to Republican efforts to run against “Pelosi Democrats” in previous races.

“It probably also will appear in lower-ballot races,” he said. “It is a useful strategy when someone positions himself as a moderate.”

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Franz said the saving grace for Trump is that Clinton and her husband Bill have provided their opponents with plenty of ammunition over the years.

“Clinton brings a tremendous amount of baggage with her,” he said. “And so does Bill.”

Devine said a growing body of research suggests that negative ads have only a fleeting impact on political races. And there is a risk of a boomerang effect, he added.

“If anything, negative ads make the target more unpopular, but they can hurt the candidate making the ad even more,” he said.