"I'm back again"
Governor Warner met with two dozen Roanoke Valley residents and business owners who have been impacted by the nation’s struggling economy. Governor Warner offered his commitment to work for common-sense, bipartisan solutions to address concerns about high energy and food costs.
Check out this story from WSLS-TV:
The Roanoke Times also had a great summary of the stop:
The group of Roanoke business owners, bus drivers, wine distributors and retirees who met with U.S. Senate candidate Mark Warner on Thursday was as diverse as you’ll find in the valley, but they all seemed to have the same concerns in mind: rising gas prices, food prices and a generally slow economy.For his part, Warner offered up little in terms of a one-shot solution.
“I’m probably not going to be the guy with the silver bullet,” Warner told them. “Some of these things took us 35 years to get into.”
But the Democrat and former Virginia governor did offer up bits and pieces that
- once assembled -formed the outline of a comprehensive energy policy and broader campaign platform....
“Here’s one of the things that makes me crazy about what’s going on in Washington with both political parties,” Warner said. “It’s divided down, on energy—it’s either all going to be alternatives or it’s all about drilling. This is a national crisis. We need both.”
Warner said the federal government should offer more tax credits for renewable energy development and for those who purchase fuel-efficient vehicles. But he also called for Congress to lift a 26-year-old moratorium on offshore drilling and allow states to make their own decisions.
He also voiced support for nuclear power – an energy source not typically endorsed by Democrats and their allies in the environmental movement – saying it “shouldn’t take 30 years to get a nuclear plant online in this country.”
Warner said that if elected, one of his first goals would be to ally with 10 or 12 other senators from both parties to form a group of “radical centrists.”
“Whether we have Mr. [Barack] Obama being president or Mr. [John] McCain being president, unless there is a group in the center of Democrats and Republicans actually working together, you’re not going to get the big changes,” Warner said. “I just absolutely believe our politics have been too much driven by voices on either end of the extreme.”
In addition to listening and talking about his platform, Warner also worked to show his personality.
Shortly after arriving at the restaurant in a Chevy Malibu, Warner greeted Pat Coleman, who’s worked at the eatery for 26 years.
“Well, I’m back again,” Warner said.