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Thursday, October 14, 2010

Christine O'Donnell, Chris Coons bar in the discussion of Delaware

Newark, Delaware - Republican Senate candidate Christine O'Donnell, Tea Party Sensation patriotism questioned Democratic opponent Chris Coons in a televised debate Wednesday night, called him a Marxist who would "buffer" waste policy of the Obama administration and leaders Congress.

Raccoons, said County Executive of New Castle, this bar has been no concrete idea O'Donnell, "The experience in the provision of slogans, but no solutions."

The two met during a 90-minute debate in Mitchell Hall, University of Delaware, on television live on WHYY TV12 and CNN, upset a highly anticipated event that the media for a long period of time representative Michael O ' Donnell Castle, a former Republican governor in the Sept. 14 primary.


Receive a cash infusion from the National Party Express tea, and his victory was swift, be regarded as a test of the power of the populist movement, the government limited.

The debate was vigorous and O'Donnell in the attack, quickly to the crisis itself, the description of Coons in his famous essay of 1985 the College "the ingredients of a bearded Marxist."

"They have learned to express his beliefs, Marxist professor smart ... That should be chilling to all voters in Delaware," said O'Donnell.

Raccoons, said the title of the article was a joke, based on his roommate Republicans mocked him for being registered as a Democrat. "I am not now, I've never been anything but a capitalist shave," said Coons bald, drawing laughter from the audience in the room.

O'Donnell is still missing in action during the campaign, events (if any) are not published, she refuses, the state, talking to the major newspaper, however, has not sent a policy proposal and always in the investigations, the trailing edge up to 19 percentage points. Experts say that the policy of Delaware would be for them, even in a gain largely been difficult.

But the international media's fascination with all things, Christine continued to issue university officials and more than 200 newspaper titles. The campaign is controversial statements they made in the 1990s as a provocative conservative cable; Bill Maher is politically incorrect and even other shows - especially when he admitted "dabbling in witchcraft," as a teenager.

His first campaign TV ad election began with O'Donnell told the camera. "I'm not a witch" She said she was an ordinary person is fueled by Washington. "I am," he said.

O'Donnell tried to steer the debate away from their old notes. "This election cycle should not be the comments I made in a sitcom, a decade and a half," he said. But O'Donnell in the past often a candidate for the Senate and its financial problems, including foreclosure and debt was in any way.

At one point, O'Donnell referred to in several plays on Saturday Night Live, spoofing her as a witch. "You're just jealous that they were on Saturday Night Live," said Coons. "I'm dying, I play, Christine," he said.

He said that due to an embargo imposed by the IRS team was a mistake. "Leadership is not dropped if it has, he says, if you stand up," said O'Donnell.

Coons were used to finance attacks O'Donnell, called a "distraction".

Amid the debate, moderator Wolf Blitzer asked O'Donnell if you still believe that evolution is a myth, as we said in 1998.

"What I think is irrelevant," said O'Donnell. He said that local communities to decide in a position to teach creationism, if an equal footing with evolution.

Nancy Karibjanian, Delaware's first half was co-hosted by Blitzer, CNN.

Pressed to certain decisions of the Supreme Court, with whom he disagrees that the name had fallen O'Donnell. She said she was against the banking law judges, but could not name one case. "I know there are many," said O'Donnell, putting a pause to say, the inability of Sarah Plain for what they are reading newspapers in an interview with CBS's mind.

"I'm very sad, very top of my head, I do not remember, but I on my site, I promise you," he said.

Sometimes it seemed Coons, his detractors to confuse. "I took a few minutes to know what they are talking about," he said at one point. "There are so many things that do not even know where to start," said Coons, supported by O'Donnell, that force candidates to publish their false campaign contributions since, he said, shocked fans who had given him.

The latest poll, a CNN / Time / Opinion Research Survey released Wednesday found Coons large O'Donnell 57 percent to 38 percent of likely voters. Coons had the support of 17 percent of Republicans, the poll found. The total survey error is plus or minus 2.5 percentage points.

Castillo said Wednesday he had no support in the Senate race and do not indicate how the second ballot in November.

"There were some personal problems and other aspects of the campaign, which was my main very worrying," said Burg of National Public Radio. "And so I think [that] is the best just leave it alone."

During the campaign, "O'Donnell said Castillo is" dressed man in his pants "debate and understand, and his campaign that the former governor was married to a homosexual relationship.

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