After reading how a Chilean billionaire can finance his way to the presidency look at what tea bag manipulators can do...
In unofficial results, McWaters received 8,051 votes. Fleming received 2,184.
McWaters, 53, ran mainly on job creation issues, touting his background as a businessman. He'll be sworn in today in Richmond - the first day of the 2010 General Assembly session - and has been tapped to respond to outgoing Gov. Timothy M. Kaine's final State of the Commonwealth speech tonight on behalf of Senate Republicans, he said.
McWaters lent himself $450,000 for the campaign, which cost at least $741,000, according to expense reports. Much of that was spent on the hard-fought Republican canvass last month against City Councilwoman Rosemary Wilson, a race that made Tuesday's finale anti-climactic.
Fleming, 61, a last-minute candidate, ran a low-key campaign without signs or major advertising. He spent about $14,000, most of which was his own money, reports show.
http://hamptonroads.com/2010/01/republican-easily-wins-stolles-state-senate-seatSo he outspent his democratic challenger $741,000 to $14,000, about 53 times as much as he simply left his republican challenge signs all over the place and the votes were about 4 to 1 in his favor.
But who is this guy? The former CEO of Amerigroup who made about $5,000,000 in CEO compensation per annum.
http://card.wordpress.com/2006/10/31/amerigroup-fined-48m-for-discrimination/Some of the highlights that were not made known to Virginia voters:
Amerigroup Corp. held liable for $144 million in damages for discriminating against pregnant women...Amerigroup avoided pregnant women and others likely to run up high doctor bills. That cheated the government, which was subsidizing the company to market its services evenly among all low-income patients regardless of whether they were pregnant or had costly illnesses, the attorneys said.
Attorneys for the company denied there was any fraud involved, saying Amerigroup had publicly stated it was trying to reduce the number of third-trimester women signed up to ensure “continuity of care.”
Jurors saw a videotape in which one executive said he always sought out “the healthies” when signing up patients for the HMO. Jurors also saw a number of e-mails in which company officials spoke positively about limiting the number of pregnant women enrolled..
... between April 2000 and July 2003 Amerigroup made 18,130 false claims against Medicaid – a state administered program for low-income patients that is subsidized by the federal government.
Source: Forbes
So my point is this: Evil sneaks in the back door because we have too many family fights about why our candidates are not perfect. And look at what the tea baggers now have in office.