Go to the link to listen plus the previous ones are on that site also.
Richard Cash, candidate for U.S. Senate in South Carolina, talks about the important lessons he learned from his 2010 Congressional race, as well as the challenges of taking on an incumbent Republican Senator, his career as a pro-life activist, the Ryan budget deal, the omnibus spending bill and the leverage that Republicans must use with the debt ceiling.
Nice gentleman, but he doesn’t know the treachery of his fellow South Carolinians and how they can unleash it.
Voters who voted in a party's primary, can vote only in the runoff of the same party. Voters who did not vote in the primary, may vote in either party's runoff.
The primary is for Democratic and Republican candidates only. Candidates running unopposed for their Party's nomination will not appear on primary ballots.
Voters may not vote in a political party's runoff if they voted in another political party's primary. However, voters who did not vote in either politicial party's primary may vote in either politicial party's runoff.
A defeated primary candidate may not actively offer or campaign as a write-in candidate for the ensuing election. The use of posters or stickers on the ballot is not permitted. The voting machine provides for a voter to write-in a candidate. Write-in votes are not allowed in primary elections or the election of President or Vice-president.
While the state permits fusion (a candidate may be nominated by multiple parties), if a candidate runs for and looses a primary (of any party), the candidate cannot appear on the November ballot.