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NY Times: Staking His Campaign on Iowa, Edwards Makes a Populist Pitch to the Left

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JohnLocke Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-17-07 10:03 PM
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NY Times: Staking His Campaign on Iowa, Edwards Makes a Populist Pitch to the Left
Edited on Sun Jun-17-07 10:03 PM by JohnLocke
Staking His Campaign on Iowa, Edwards Makes a Populist Pitch to the Left
By Adam Nagourney--New York Times
Sunday, June 18, 2007

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TIPTON, Iowa, June 16--Four years ago — facing what seemed to be a certain defeat in the Iowa Democratic caucuses — John Edwards recast his presidential campaign with weeks to go before the vote, unveiling an emotionally powerful speech about poverty that he delivered relentlessly across the state. Mr. Edwards came within a few thousand votes of victory. To this day, he tells associates he would have won with another week.
This year, Mr. Edwards has picked up where he left off in 2004. He visited 14 places in Iowa in the course of three days this weekend, an itinerary reflecting just how much he has settled on this state as the place where his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination will rise or fall.
(...)
This time, he is a candidate of the left in a state marked by a strong antiwar and liberal streak, filling a vacancy created as Senators Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton have campaigned from the center. Mr. Edwards has shown a new eagerness to draw contrasts with his opponents on issues like the war in Iraq and health care, in no small part motivated by his struggle not to get lost in a field of big names. And he has gone from the boyish, easygoing one-time senator from North Carolina to a candidate displaying an urgently engaging manner as likely to seize as to charm an audience, an approach that appears to be particularly effective in the close-quarter meetings that fill his days here.
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“Here’s what I think,” Mr. Edwards proclaimed repeatedly as he answered a welter of questions throughout the day, an introductory phrase that signaled a lengthy discussion on his opposition to the war in Iraq, his call for national health care or his view of terrorism.
In an interview, Mr. Edwards said any changes observed by those who watched him last time were the product of maturity and experience, rather than any political retooling. He noted that he had spent the last two years filling potential gaps in his resume, founding a poverty center in North Carolina and traveling abroad.
“More seasoned,” Mr. Edwards said by way of self-assessment, leaning forward and squinting his eyes in the interview, between a late-afternoon jog and an early-evening fund-raiser. “I’ve done a lot of work since the last campaign. And I will say in all honesty that there clearly is some additional depth on these issues. Particularly world issues.”
Though Iowa voters who knew Mr. Edwards in 2004 are finding a different candidate on their doorsteps this time, they are struck more by what they described as his move to the left.
“It seems to be that the last time he was running, he was trying to be the candidate of the D.L.C., trying to be moderate, more centrist,” said Gordon Fischer, who was the state Democratic chairman in 2004 and has not endorsed a candidate this time. He was referring to the moderate Democratic Leadership Council.
“This time around, he’s sort of cut loose from that,” Mr. Fischer continued. “And he is outflanking Senator Obama and Senator Clinton on the left.”
For now, Mr. Edwards’s efforts seem to be paying off. Democrats across the state say he appears to have built strong support here. Mr. Edwards’s hope is that beating Mr. Obama and Mrs. Clinton in Iowa would slingshot him into the front of the field as the race moves across the nation, allowing him to overcome the financial and name-recognition advantage his two main rivals enjoy.
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Mrs. Edwards sat to the side during the interview in a Des Moines hotel, jumping in at one point when Mr. Edwards was discussing his aggressive response to Mr. Obama and Mrs. Clinton on the issue of the war at a debate in New Hampshire last week.
“Early in that debate, Mrs. Clinton said something about basically we’re all the same about that,” Mrs. Edwards said. “That wasn’t actually accurate. They weren’t all the same. If everything all looks likes it’s packaged like butter, and some of it’s oleo — voters need to know what they are buying.”
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Read the rest here.
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Jim Sagle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-17-07 10:12 PM
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1. The New Whore Times puts its cynical spin on a Democratic campaign event once again.
Edited on Sun Jun-17-07 10:13 PM by Jim Sagle
What a surprise. :sarcasm:
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illinoisprogressive Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-17-07 10:13 PM
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2. great picture you posted.
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