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Edwards Joins Kerry's Bid to
Unseat Bush
Washington -
Presidential candidate John Kerry on Tuesday chose former rival
John Edwards as his running mate, selecting the smooth-talking
Southern populist over more seasoned politicians in hopes of injecting
vigor and small-town appeal into the Democratic ticket.
"I trust that met with your
approval," Kerry told a boisterous crowd of supporters in Pittsburgh
who shouted their consent while waving hot-off-the-presses
"Kerry-Edwards" placards.
The two senators — Kerry of
Massachusetts and Edwards of North Carolina — sealed their political
marriage during a 15-minute, early morning telephone conversation that
papered over their differences in style and substance.
"I was humbled by his offer," Edwards
said in a statement, "and thrilled to accept it."
Kerry, 60, a decorated Vietnam
veteran whom critics call aloof, calculated that his ticket didn't
need foreign policy heft as much as a bit of pizazz and the quick
embrace of party activists who had rallied behind Edwards' stealth
campaign for the No. 2 slot.
Edwards, 51, who made a fortune as a
trial lawyer before jumping into politics in the 1990s as a
self-styled champion for the common man, edged out several Washington
veterans under consideration, including Rep. Dick Gephardt of
Missouri and Sen. Bob Graham of Florida.
Along with Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack, a
veteran of state politics with a low national profile, they were
finalists in a process that began four months ago with a list of about
25 candidates.
In March, after defeating Gephardt,
Graham, Edwards and several others in the Democratic primaries, Kerry
told his vice presidential search team to help him find a political
soul mate who would be "ready at any minute" to assume the presidency.
Republicans on Tuesday questioned
whether Edwards met either standard. While President Bush and
Vice President Dick Cheney politely welcomed Edwards to a
"spirited race," their allies at the Republican National Committee
issued a thick press release that called the first-term senator a
politically inexperienced phony who is beholden to the trial-lawyer
lobby.
"Disingenuous, unaccomplished
liberal," the RNC said.
Edwards' relative lack of foreign
policy work — he is a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee —
could be an issue in a campaign shadowed by war, strategists in both
parties said.
Privately, Bush advisers acknowledged
that Edwards has the capacity to be formidable foe, helping Kerry to
broaden the electoral map and sharpen his economic message.
Edwards entered the Senate and public
life in 1998 after upsetting Republican Sen. Lauch Faircloth. The son
of a mill worker, Edwards worked his way through college sweeping
floors before converting his law degree into a multimillion-dollar
practice specializing in medical malpractice and product liability
judgments.
He jumped early into a Democratic
nomination fight filled with more seasoned politicians, including
Kerry, who questioned Edwards' decision to seek the presidency so
early in his political career. In January, Kerry mocked Edwards' lack
of international or military experience.
"When I came back from Vietnam in
1969," Kerry said, "I don't know if John Edwards was out of diapers
then."
Mindful that Republicans will seize
on the seasoning issue, Kerry assured supporters Tuesday, "John
Edwards is ready for this job. He is ready for this job."
Obsessed with secrecy, Kerry kept his
decision to himself until the last possible minute, giving Edwards no
time to get to Pittsburgh for the announcement. The North Carolinian
was at his Washington home, readying his children for summer camp,
when he got word.
Democrats predicted the folksy
Edwards will help the ticket in rural America, where Kerry's patrician
New England manner may not play as well. Democrats have lost enormous
ground in the exurban and rural precincts, largely because of social
issues such as abortions and gun control.
Edwards may also put his
traditionally GOP state — and its 15 electoral votes — in play, along
with other Southern venues, Democrats said.
During the primary campaign, Edwards
did better than Kerry among Republicans and nearly as well among
independents, according to exit polls conducted for The Associated
Press by Edison Media Research and Mitofsky International. By
comparison, among all voters in those primaries, Kerry beat Edwards
2-to-1.
Edwards portrayed himself as a
positive campaigner, even as he criticized Kerry's trade policies and
mocked his long-winded style. Edwards scored political points with an
anti-Bush message about "two Americas" — one for the privileged and
another for everybody else.
Kerry, who has had trouble crafting a
general election message, said of the new ticket, "I am determined
that we reach out across party lines, that we speak to the heart of
America, that we speak of hope and of optimism."
Kerry's choice was a bow to party
pressure: Edwards was the overwhelming choice of delegates to the
Democratic National Convention, according to an AP survey, and party
leaders had been urging Kerry to shed his initial resistance to the
senator.
Edwards arrived in Pittsburgh in the
afternoon for a dinner between the Edwards and Kerry families at
Kerry's Pittsburgh estate. The candidates launch a multistate campaign
tour in Ohio on Wednesday, ending in Edwards' home state Saturday.
They are the first senators to serve
on the same ticket since 1972, when Democratic Sens. George McGovern
of South Dakota and Thomas Eagleton of Missouri teamed up. Eagleton
dropped out of the race because of his mental history.
A dozen years earlier, a
Massachusetts senator with the initials JFK — John F. Kennedy — turned
to a high-voltage Southerner he wasn't particularly fond of: Sen.
Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas.
Suggesting that Edwards was Kerry's
second choice, the Bush campaign rushed to the airwaves with an ad
featuring Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who had rejected overtures from
Kerry about a bipartisan ticket. In the spot, McCain praises Bush.
Kerry's team hurried out an ad
featuring the newly minted ticket.
Kerry hopes the teaming dominates the
political landscape during the three-week run-up to the Democratic
National Convention in Boston.
Convention delegates will formally
nominate the Kerry-Edwards ticket, whose common surnames were
celebrated at the Pittsburgh rally with a rendition of Chuck Berry's
"Johnny B. Goode."
Democrats, even supporters of the
also-rans, united behind the ticket.
"This is the choice," said Rep. Ike
Skelton, a Missouri Democrat who wanted Gephardt on the ticket. "You
put everything else behind you." --
Associated Press
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