News Coverage
YouTube, Video by Franklin Garcia on May 4, 2011
Vincent Orange victory party for At-Large DC Council election of April 26, 2011
wusa9.com on April 29, 2011
Vincent Orange Wins DC Council At-Large Seat
Democrat Vincent Orange will be DC's new at-large city council member. He captured 28 percent of the vote in Tuesday's special election. [+] Read Story
TBD.com on April 29, 2011
Vincent Orange wins D.C. Council At-Large election
Vincent Orange narrowly defeated Republican Patrick Mara for the At-Large seat once occupied by Council Chair Kwame Brown in Tuesday's special election, DCist reports. [+] Read Story
The Washington Post on March 29, 2011
AFL-CIO backs Orange in at-large race
The Metropolitan Washington Council of the AFL-CIO decided Monday night to endorse former council member Vincent B. Orange in the at-large race, a significant boost for a campaign that appears to be gaining momentum. [+] Read Story
Washington City Paper, Loose Lips blog on March 21, 2011
Orange Roll
Special election At-Large candidate Vincent Orange had a good weekend. He won nearly 90 percent of the vote during this weekend's Ward 8 straw poll and officially kicked off his campaign with a party. [+] Read Story
Washington City Paper, Loose Lips blog on March 21, 2011
Everything is Coming Up Orange
LL was trapped in a timesuck at the Wilson Building yesterday, where a couple political pontificators whispered that they think moneyman Vincent Orange will be the likely winner of the April special election. [+] Read Story
The Georgetown Dish on March 20, 2011
Orange rolls into high gear with campaign kick-off
Joined by Georgetowners such as Hope Solomon and well-known ANC Commissioners such as Ward 3's Tom Smith, Vincent Orange, the former Ward 5 Councilmember and unsuccessful candidate for mayor and Council chairman, pushed his at-large council campaign into high gear on Saturday with a kickoff rally in Northeast including a strong message on Georgetown University's proposed expansion plan and a pledge not to raise taxes to balance the D.C. budget. [+] Read Story
Four26 on March 11, 2011
Orange Crushes in Contributions, Cash-on-Hand
Vincent Orange raised $0 through the January 31 reporting period. Through March 10, though, he took in a shocking $191,000, besting his competition by close to $150,000. Not only did he raise way more money, but he hasn't spent a dime, leaving him with the full $191,000 to carry him through to the April 26 At-Large Special Election. [+] Read Story
DCist on March 11, 2011
Orange Crushes in Contributions
Former Ward 5 councilmember and citywide candidate Vincent Orange has been quiet this season, even though he's in the running for the April 26 At-Large Special Election. Despite his relative silence, though, Orange managed to raise $191,000 through March, beating his competition (including presumed frontrunner Councilmember Sekou Biddle) by over $150,000. [+] Read Story
The Washington Post on March 4, 2011
AFSCME endorses Vincent Orange in council race
The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Workers, which played a key role in helping elect Mayor Vincent C. Gray last year, announced today that it is supporting former council member Vincent B. Orange in the April 26 election for an at-large seat on the council. [+] Read Story
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The Orange Vision
Vincent's vision for Washington, DC, is that of a world-class city operating at its fullest potential. An extremely vibrant city that continues to beckon individuals, couples and families to live in, visit and experience its culture, arts, restaurants, retail, entertainment, sports venues, neighborhoods and tourism. More
Get to Know Vincent
As an attorney and certifiedpublic accountant, Vincent Orange has the skillset DC needs to make the citygreat again. In his earlier tenure on the DC Council, Vincent helped the cityturn a $518 million deficit into a $1.6 billion surplus reserve. Sincere-joining the DC Council last year, he has been at the forefront of efforts torestore ethical integrity to the Council, root out government waste, providejobs and continue education reform.More
