Edwards, Sounding Like a Candidate, Calls for Fighting Poverty
By Roger Simon
June 23 (Bloomberg) -- Former Democratic vice presidential
nominee John Edwards says he will do ``anything'' to get ordinary
Americans to pay attention to poverty -- even at the risk of
sounding like a 2008 presidential candidate.
Edwards, who ran for the Democratic nomination in 2004
before joining Massachusetts Senator John Kerry on the ticket,
has focused on the issue since he left the Senate last year, as
director of the Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
While the job has given him the opportunity to raise the
visibility of poverty in the U.S., it has also given him plenty
of opportunities to keep himself visible. One came yesterday,
when Edwards, 53, visited Washington for a speech at the National
Press Club.
``Anything I can do to get poverty on the national radar
screen, I am going to do,'' Edwards said in an interview before
his speech, which he said was the first of several on issues he
considers important, including energy costs and education.
``Edwards really found his voice and calling after the last
election,'' said Anna Burger, international secretary-treasurer
of the Service Employees International Union. ``He talks about
rebuilding the middle class; he talks about his poverty-center
work. And he is out and around the states taking up the cause of
working people.''
Labor's Candidate
If Edwards does run for president, he intends to be the
candidate of organized labor. He has walked picket lines with
International Brotherhood of Teamsters President James P. Hoffa,
spoke at the United Mine Workers convention in Las Vegas in
April, championed the cause of hotel and restaurant workers and
met with small gatherings of workers and union leaders around the
country.
''I think that he is out working to win the hearts and minds
of working people and union activists,'' said Burger, whose union
represents 1.8 million workers. `And he is not shy about saying
he is interested in running for president.''
Bob Kerrey, a former governor and senator from Nebraska who
ran for president in 1992, recruited Edwards to run for the
Senate from North Carolina when Kerrey was chairman of the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. Kerrey said that as the
presidential campaign heats up in the fall of 2007, ``I think
Edwards could open up a strong second; he might even be the
front-runner. It is not impossible. He will be labor's favorite
Democrat.''
Strong in Iowa
Another Edwards advantage in a presidential run is a strong
organization in Iowa, whose caucuses begin the primary season.
Edwards came in a strong second to John Kerry in Iowa in 2004 by
campaigning hard in rural areas. He also carried Polk County, the
most populous county in the state.
Edwards visited Iowa four times in 2005 and five times so
far this year, the most visits of any 2008 Democratic hopeful.
Senator Hillary Clinton of New York, who is campaigning for re-
election to the Senate this year, hasn't been to Iowa since 2003.
Two weeks ago, Edwards came in first in a Des Moines
Register poll of Iowans who say they are likely to vote in the
caucuses. He received 30 percent in the poll to Clinton's 26
percent, one of the rare times that Clinton hasn't come in first
in a presidential poll.
The poll also found Clinton's ``very unfavorable'' rating
was 11 percent, nearly four times that of Edwards' rating of 3
percent.
`He's Running'
``If he wins the Iowa caucus, he will be No. 1 in New
Hampshire, and the people in New Hampshire are very smart when it
comes to presidential politics,'' said Bob Kerrey, who is now
president of New School University in New York City. ``They want
a winner.''
Gordon Fischer, former chairman of the Iowa Democratic
Party, who isn't aligned with any presidential campaign, says
Edwards has ``great support'' in Iowa. ``He has phoned folks here
and e-mailed folks here and done guest editorials in the Des
Moines Register,'' Fischer said. ``He is working it. That pays
off.''
Fischer said the Iraq war is very important to the
Democratic activists who dominate the Iowa caucuses, and
``Edwards' apology made a big difference to Democrats here.''
Fischer was referring to a Nov. 13, 2005, opinion piece
Edwards wrote for the Washington Post that began, ``I was
wrong.'' He went on to say that his 2002 Senate vote authorizing
President George W. Bush to use force in Iraq was a mistake, and
``I take responsibility for that mistake.''
Withdraw From Iraq
Yesterday, Edwards called for the immediate withdrawal of
40,000 U.S. troops from Iraq. ``We need to be getting out,''
Edwards said in the interview. He said all combat troops should
be withdrawn ``within 12 to 18 months.''
In his Press Club speech, Edwards also addressed energy
policy, saying ``I want to live in an America free from
dependence on fossil fuel'' and that ``sacrifice, conservation
and innovation will be required.''
In the interview, Edwards touched on immigration, saying
those workers already in the country illegally should be placed
on a ``path to citizenship'' as long as they pay their taxes, pay
a fine and learn English. He said he also favors improved border
security.
He called the possibility of Iran gaining a nuclear weapon
``the most serious threat the world has seen since the Cuban
missile crisis.''
Chief Issue
In both his speech and interview, he returned repeatedly to
the issue of domestic poverty. He proposed that the number of
poor Americans be cut by a third in the next 10 years and poverty
be eliminated in the next 30 years. In his speech, Edwards also
stressed concern for the ``forgotten middle class.''
Edwards said America must build a ``working society'' that
would create ``new opportunities for work,'' plus ``affordable
housing near good jobs'' and a million ``last-chance'' jobs ``for
people who cannot find work on their own.''
As Bill Clinton did when he ran for president in 1992,
Edwards also emphasized the importance of individual
responsibility, saying ``we would expect everyone who can work to
work'' and that it is time to finish the job of welfare reform by
giving low-income men the opportunity to work and ``challenging
them to take responsibility for doing so.''
``If they don't work, they don't get paid,'' Edwards said.
``If they owe child support, their children will get paid first,
because women shouldn't have to raise children on their own.''
Populist Message
In 2004, Edwards stressed a populist message of two
Americas, ``one America that is struggling to get by, another
America that can buy anything it wants, even Congress and a
president.''
Independent political analyst Charles Cook, editor of the
Cook Political Report in Washington, said Edwards has honed his
message since that campaign, and that now ``it is less class-
warfare oriented.''
Cook said that among Edwards' Democratic rivals, former
Governor Mark Warner of Virginia and Senator Evan Bayh of Indiana
``are competing for the cautious middle,'' while John Kerry is an
``old-style populist.''
``Edwards is now offering a hybrid of populism and
liberalism that works,'' Cook said.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Roger Simon in Washington at
rogersimon@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: June 23, 2006 00:04 EDT