John Edwards Kicks Off 2008 Bid
Former VP Candidate Announces Campaign In New Orleans
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Play CBS Video Video Edwards Announces '08 Run CBS News RAW: Joined by a group of young people in New Orleans' Ninth Ward, John Edwards officially announced his plan to run for the presidency in 2008.
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Video Edwards On Presidency, Ford Former N.C. Sen. John Edwards plans to run in the 2008 presidential election. Harry Smith speaks with Edwards about his Democratic candidacy, the late Gerald Ford and other issues.
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John Edwards officially announced that he will seek the Democratic nomination for U.S. president, Dec. 28, 2006 in New Orleans. (CBS)
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Who's Who 2008 Democratic Hopefuls Clinton, Obama and Edwards lead the chase for the Democratic nomination.
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Special Report Ask The White House Booth Send your questions to Correspondents Jim Axelrod, Bill Plante, Mark Knoller and Peter Maer. Read their answers here.
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Photo Essay Kerry's Choice Sen. John Edwards on the campaign trail
He has positioned himself as a serious contender. He's been strengthening his ties to labor and other Democratic activists behind the scenes, rebuilding a top-notch campaign staff and honing his skills. The efforts have made him the leading candidate in early polls of Iowa Democrats who will get the first say in the nomination fight.
Edwards' advisers scheduled a six-state announcement tour between Christmas and New Year's Day with the hopes that news would be slow and he could dominate media coverage. Over three days, Edwards also planned to travel to Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Carolina and his home state of North Carolina.
Edwards was kicking off his campaign at one of the few homes in the neighborhood that appears close to being habitable. It belongs to Orelia Tyler, 54, who has been living in a Federal Emergency Management Agency trailer in her yard while her home was rebuilt.
Edwards' challenge over the next year will be to show that he can keep up with front-runners Clinton and Obama, should they get in the race, in terms of fundraising and support. Unlike officeholders who may run, Edwards does not have a federal campaign account and will have to start raising money from scratch.
He also has hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt from his 2004 campaign.
The son of a textile mill worker, Edwards has been on a fast track most of his life despite his up-by-the-bootstraps roots.
A standout law student who became a stunningly successful trial lawyer and millionaire, Edwards vaulted from nowhere politically into the U.S. Senate and then onto the 2004 Democratic presidential ticket — all in less than six years.
In 1998, in his first bid for public office, Edwards defeated incumbent Sen. Lauch Faircloth, R-N.C., a leading advocate for impeachment of President Clinton.
Edwards began building support for his first presidential bid shortly after arriving in the Senate. He quickly made a name for himself in Congress, using his legal background to help Democratic colleagues navigate the impeachment hearings.
Edwards launched a bid for the Democratic nomination in 2003 and quickly caught the eye of Democratic strategists. Although he won only the South Carolina primary, his skills on the trail, his cheerful demeanor, and his message of "two Americas" — one composed of the wealthy and privileged, and the other of the hardworking common man — excited voters, especially independents and moderate-leaning Democrats.
Edwards' handsome, youthful appearance also gave him a measure of star quality, one of the reasons Kerry selected Edwards as his running mate.
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





On March 17th there will be protests across the country (and around the world) and (if that idiot in the White House orders in more troops) some of them may well be violent! We can hope so! Protest and protest violently or peacefully, which ever turns you on but godda*mn it DO SOMETHING!
Go to www.internationalanswer.org and find out how to make your voice heard. Otherwise shut the fu*ck up and let Bush run your life for you!
Be a coward or be a hero, but *** it make your position known! Speak up!
Until then, I wish more people would come to the conclusion of IMPEACHMENT!!! :-{
You don't have to like Edwards or even vote for him - but to spread distortions and deceptions about him is just plain wrong. Haven't we had enough of that from the Bush White House?
Want another insider skull and bones type in the Whitehouse? Vote Edwards. Want to be represented? Vote in the primary election and actually select who you elect.
I will not vote for a rich person, an insider or an Israel supporting zionist. That only leaves Dennis Kucinich on my list.
'Nuff said.
TO CLARIFY THE USE OF THE WORD "cuts", EDWARDS WANTS TO reduce POVERTY, reduce GLOBAL WARMING, AND reduce THE NUMBER OF TROOPS IN IRAQ.
I wish the author of the article had substituted "reduce" for "cuts" since the first reading suggests just the opposite of John Edwards goals.
If the voters could, in an effective manner, voice their opinions in the choice of a %u201Crunning mate%u201D he would have a much better chance of winning the presidency.
.. I doubt that Joe Lieberman would be among the majority of voter%u2019s recommendations, especially democrats.
Gore%u2019s choice of Lieberman as his running mate was likely the main reason the vote in the 2000 election was so close.
- by frb01 December 28, 2006 2:07 PM EST
- I think his message was clear the last time, there are two America's and a lot of us our struggling. He has also said he learned from the process and that to be a seasoned candidate you have to go through the process. Most of the time, whether it is 1972, 1980, 1984, or 2004, the front runners stumble or fail in the vetting process that is unfortunately part of the political process. This is why people like Evan Byah may have exited too soon. I am not saying that Obama or Clinton lose momentum, but Clinton carries a lot of negative ratings. John Edwards is as viable a candidate as anyone, and I hope all those who want to run, run. But the key is wanting it, because they pay a price. If he gets the nomination, Joe Lieberman would be a good choice to be VP, for he has also had some rivers to cross as of late. Edwards rose from humble beginnings and has had personal tragedy along the way. And this is the type of personal experience we need in our candidates. Obama, Biden, McCain, Guiliani, and Romney that I know of have all had a slice of these tests.
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