CLEVELAND, Ohio -- An advocacy organization run by former top campaign aides to President Donald Trump has reserved a round of cable TV ads set to run next week in U.S. Rep. Dave Joyce's Cleveland-area district, according to three Republican sources who track political advertising in Ohio.

The ads are scheduled to air between April 17-23 on cable channels for Spectrum and U-Verse customers within targeted areas of the district, which as a whole includes Ashtabula, Geauga and Lake counties, as well as portions of Cuyahoga, Portage, Trumbull and Summit counties. America First Policies, a nonprofit founded in January to advance Trump's legislative agenda, spent nearly $50,000 to place the ads, sources said. The Ohio ads are part of a larger $360,000 cable TV buy in five other congressional districts in Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Pennsylvania and Virginia.

The content of the ads is unclear -- America First Policies has not announced them, and a spokeswoman for the group didn't return messages seeking comment. But the group's previous work has focused on touting Trump's achievements, and encouraging backers to call their Congressional representative to offer their support.

At first glance, the timing of the ad buy is interesting, given Joyce's opposition late last month to the Trump-backed American Health Care Act, which would have dramatically overhauled the federal healthcare law known as Obamacare. But since the purchase is part of a relatively small cable buy -- scattered among districts represented by members with a range of opinions on the AHCA and other issues-- it doesn't appear to be specifically targeted at Joyce, Republican strategists said.

"I'm not privy to their targeting, but clearly they have some data that make them interested in these districts," said Jai Chabria, a former top adviser to Republican Ohio Gov. John Kasich. "Still, I don't think it has to do with the members in these districts. It has to do with the supporters of the president who live in these districts."

Chabria, who had not seen the ads and had no independent knowledge of them, added: "The healthcare issue was a major legislative loss for them, and they want to remind their supporters that they're actually for things, and that they want to get things done for them."

While the latest round of America First Policies ads appear to be benign, it's possible the group eventually will use its resources to more forcefully put pressure on Republican lawmakers deemed to not be sufficiently supportive of Trump.

"There is plenty of time and opportunity for Republican lawmakers to keep their promises to their voters and support the president's agenda to make America great again," group spokeswoman Katrina Pierson told the Washington Post earlier this month. "Lawmakers will be held accountable at the appropriate time."

Here's an example of the most recent America First Policies ad: