Put "America back to work" says unlikely U.S Senate candidate
Unlikely U.S. Senate nominee Alvin Greene introduced himself to a worldwide audience as well as curious neighbors Sunday as he laid out his platform in an eight-minute speech that alternated between forceful and awkward.
Nearly 400 people, including TV networks and reporters from as far as London , packed a middle school gym in his hometown to hear South Carolina's Democratic U.S. Senate candidate deliver his first known campaign speech.
They came to hear the 32-year-old unemployed veteran who easily — and surprisingly — won last month's primary over a better-known and much better funded opponent. He now faces Republican Sen. Jim DeMint .
"My campaign is about getting South Carolina and America back to work, and moving South Carolina and America forward," Greene said. " South Carolina and America cannot afford six more years of my opponent."
In dozens of post-primary interviews, Greene had revealed himself as a man of few words but offered little about why he's running or what he'd do.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/mcclatchy/20...latchy/3570075
I guess he fits in the vote the other guy out no matter what party, but would the vocal vote the guy out here group vote for him???
Fred
"Everyday I beat my own previous record for number of consecutive days I've
stayed alive."
'Take care of yourself, and each other.'