"Stealth Candidate" is used, typically in hindsight after an election, to refer to two different kinds of politicians. What they have in common is that their core beliefs and legislative ambitions do not generally emerge until after they have won the election. This is due as much to biased or careless reporting as it is to any concealed agenda.
1) The original "stealth candidates," back when the term was coined in the 1980's, were members of the Christian Right running for local office who never showed up on the media's radar because they did most of their campaigning in churches where journalists didn't attend. They were thereby able to pick up the endorsements of key figures in the movement who influenced a heavy voter turnout of their people, thus resulting in the defeat of the front-runners who enjoyed wide popular support in the polls, but were underrepresented in the voting booth.
2) "Stealth Candidate" was also being used by the 2000's to refer to any politician who ran on either a vague (e.g. "Bring hope and change") or hopelessly unrealistic (e.g. "End the war in Iraq") platform in order to get the votes needed to get into office, without any realistic plan to actually fulfill the campaign promises once elected. Voters would then choose the politician who was best at making them feel good, rather than one who could actually deliver on what was promised.
Stealth is 205m!
Stealth has no verb.
obviously they are the masters of stealth
My stealth doesnt misfire
An antonym for stealth is sneaky
The F-22 stealth raptor is the stealth combat aircraft.
the stealth fighter has a classified mixture of a special kind of aircraft paint that the radar cant read. Answer: Stealth is "designed in". It relies upon the shaping of the airframe, (although stealth paint can help).
Wichita Stealth was created in 1999.
Washington Stealth was created in 2009.
Stealth Records was created in 2002.
Operation Stealth was created in 1990.
Operation Stealth happened in 1990.