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When candidates run to get elected for some important office (governor, predisent, etc.) They usually make all kinds of speechs promising to do this and that for the people. However, does a candidate usually talk about when he wins an election?

2006-11-10 04:50:35 · 6 answers · asked by Sapphire-by-the-sea 2 in Politics & Government Elections

6 answers

After using the proper etiquette, the newly elected official should say that it was fun and a learning experience running against his/her opposer. Then they will say that their opposer ran a good campaign, and that the area's votes were the deciding factor, that they spoke out about who they wanted, and that he/she was chosen. Then they will talk about what they will do in their new term, and will use highlights of the past to put a limelight on their future.

2006-11-10 06:20:25 · answer #1 · answered by lukebunker 2 · 0 0

I'd like to know what Democrat Senator Feinstein of California is thinking. She sits on the the Senate Appropriations Committee. Richard Blum, her multi-millionaire husband, is the primary owner of Perini Corporation, with big military contracts in Iraq.

The price of Perini stock has gone straight up since Nov 7.

2006-11-10 05:01:59 · answer #2 · answered by senior citizen 5 · 0 0

He can talk about his timetable to achieve what he promised during his campaign

2006-11-10 05:02:04 · answer #3 · answered by mysteriousmidnightmiss 1 · 0 0

He/she lies about all the good things that he/she are going to do while in office.

2006-11-10 04:53:16 · answer #4 · answered by Preacher 6 · 0 0

he goes to play golf, talk later

2006-11-10 04:52:40 · answer #5 · answered by Star 4 · 0 0

anything but the truth

2006-11-10 04:54:40 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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