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Most of the crowd saw Greene's awkward media interviews in the days after his shocking primary win June 8 over a former judge and state lawmaker who had the full backing of the Democratic party. They'd followed as he withstood a challenge to the vote and calls for him to step aside because of the pending charge that came to light only after the win. Pamela Clavon Brunson bristled at the scorn heaped on Greene for his halting answers and quirky ideas. People should be proud of a young black man following his dream of becoming a U.S. Senator, even if he doesn't give an amazing speech like other longtime politicians. "The polished ones just know how to lie better," said the 46-year-old retired police officer now living in Manning. Jerry Johnson was said Greene looked much better giving his speech than he has in interviews. "I wasn't blown away, but he didn't do bad," Johnson said. "Considering I didn't know anything about him coming in, that's not so bad." The Manning branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People said it invited Greene to speak so its members could get to know him better. Greene faces Republican U.S. Sen. Jim DeMint and Green Party candidate Tom Clements in November. DeMint has more than $3.5 million to spend, while Greene told a reporter last week he has raised about $1,000. But beating those kind of odds should be familiar to anyone who reads the Bible, said Manning NAACP president Bobby Fleming. "It was not the people who put David before Goliath," Fleming said. "It was God who gave him the opportunity to defeat the giant."
[Associated
Press;
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