January 29, 2010 3:37 PM

Edwards Campaign Faces Uncertain Future

(CBS/AP)  John and Elizabeth Edwards stood side-by-side in the North Carolina sunshine to announce that her cancer was back and that his run for the presidency would go forward at full speed.

It was a sympathetic tableau that drew an immediate outpouring of well wishes from people of all political persuasions.

"You can cower in the corner and hide or you can be tough and go out there and stand up for what you believe in," Edwards said. His wife said her illness was a hurdle they would surmount together.

That sort of can-do optimism in a grim and unavoidable situation may well bring short-term benefits to a campaign trying to keep up with Democratic heavy-hitters Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama. But the longer-term political ramifications of his pursuing the presidency during her health crisis are unknown, and could well hinge on Mrs. Edwards' health.

Ironically, John Edwards is getting more attention than he's received in this presidential campaign so far and will likely raise his profile, CBS News correspondent Gloria Borger reported, who added that how the couple deals with Elizabeth's cancer will show the nation what kind of a couple they are because they are very much a campaign team.

The Edwardses have a chance to "humanize" this presidential campaign now, especially on an issue such as health care, Jim VandeHei, of Politico.com told CBS' The Early Show.

"John Edwards talks a lot about greater access to health care," VandeHei said. "He can really talk, now, as a family member who understands what that means."

If Mrs. Edwards is able to campaign at his side with energy and vigor, there could well be a positive reaction to the resolute candidate and his wife, who press forward despite adversity. Millions of Americans themselves have faced cancer or know someone who has, and can identify with their challenge.

"It makes him real," said Democratic strategist Dane Strother. "It makes her real."

Still, Mrs. Edwards' illness injects a new element of uncertainty into the campaign, and political calculations could quickly change should her condition worsen significantly.

Already, there was a foreshadowing of that in critics' blog postings Thursday that questioned whether a presidential campaign is the right place for a man with two small children and a wife with cancer.

Edwards stressed that doctors had assured them the campaign would not interfere with his wife's treatment, and added: "Any time, any place I need to be with Elizabeth I will be there — period."

Democratic pollster Mark Mellman said that while the disclosure of Mrs. Edwards' illness could generate short-term interest in the Edwards campaign, it probably doesn't change the long-term dynamic significantly.

"A lot will depend on how people react, and anybody that tries to tell you how people are going to react is making it up," Mellman added. "It is an unusual situation, and we're out of the realm of clear historical precedent."

Edwards' fundraiser Fred Barron speculated that financial support for the campaign could even increase "in the sense that more people will truly get to know John and Elizabeth Edwards." He said the sponsor of a private fundraiser for Edwards on Thursday night in New York told Barron after the announcement that he was doubling his fundraising goal for the event. Neither the amount nor the identity of the fundraiser was released.

Democratic consultant Chris Lehane said candidates often are measured by how they respond in the heat of a stressful moment. In this case, he said, the Edwardses handled things "about as well as you can handle a situation like this," by being forthright, quick to respond and making clear that it was Elizabeth Edwards' decision for the campaign to go forward.

"These are situations where voters extrapolate an awful lot about a candidate's character," Lehane said. Those who might have questioned whether Edwards had the toughness to be president could well draw a lesson from how he handles this situation, Lehane added.

Edwards is not the only candidate running for president in the shadow of a spouse's incurable health problems. Ann Romney was diagnosed in 1998 with multiple sclerosis, a progressive nerve disease that she says she's kept under control but has left her fatigued during her husband Mitt's GOP presidential campaign.

"Were she not healthy I would not have run," Romney told the AP last month. "She is able to manage her disease such that she does not overdo or cause herself physical problem. Were that not the case, we'd have made a different decision. We'd be in the sun somewhere."

Mrs. Edwards, 57, was first diagnosed with breast cancer in the final weeks of the 2004 campaign. She underwent several months of radiation and chemotherapy. This week, doctors found the cancer had returned, and was in one of her ribs. Doctors don't know exactly how widespread the cancer is, but will be watching some other suspicious spots.

The average survival rate has been 2 1/2 to five years, CBS News medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook reports. But doctors say the odds are improving, thanks to newer therapies that target the cancer with fewer side effects.

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
  • Scott Conroy

    Scott Conroy is a National Political Reporter for RealClearPolitics and a contributor for CBS News.

Add a Comment See all 40 Comments
by jebby_one March 24, 2007 12:55 AM EDT
It's obvious that Edwards is actually running for Vice President rather than President.

Reply to this comment
by golfkt March 23, 2007 5:49 PM EDT
Good luck to both Mrs. Edwards and Tony Snow...politics be damned...health is always the most important thing...politics be damned...yes, I am a repub...but that's meaningless at a time like this...

Both sides are guilty of stupid statements...both the left and the right..
Reply to this comment
by scott4261 March 23, 2007 4:57 PM EDT
No doubt. The low brow, below the belt tactics here are uncalled for. I admit I get sucked in sometimes, but jeez! It is without class and I, for one, was raised better than that.

I believe that extreme right would do well to reacquaint themselves with the Sermon on the Mount. Some pretty radical, liberal ideas from Jesus in there!
Reply to this comment
by anvilheadsix March 23, 2007 4:48 PM EDT
I dread the compassionate christian conservative neocon attack on Elizabeth Edwards that will surely come soon. I'll bet Anne Coulter already has a chapter on it.
Posted by marcodele at 12:04 PM : Mar 23, 2007

The whack job christians will say that god gave her cancer because she supports the right to choose or gay rights or something insane like that.
Reply to this comment
by scott4261 March 23, 2007 4:45 PM EDT
It's amazing. It is quite clear to me that he loves her and they have a very healthy marriage. Are we looking at the same people? I see the influence of the right wing spin miesters is already working on some. Jeez!
Reply to this comment
by marcodele March 23, 2007 3:16 PM EDT
Someday they'll have to answer to someone besides Rush Limbaugh, Anne Coulter and Fox News.
I wouldn't want to be in their shoes.
Reply to this comment
by marcodele March 23, 2007 3:16 PM EDT
Someday they'll have to answer to someone besides Rush Limbaugh, Anne Coulter and Fox News.
I wouldn't want to be in their shoes.
Reply to this comment
by scott4261 March 23, 2007 3:07 PM EDT
It's already happening and the lemmings are in here parroting the lines. Check the "John Edwards: 'The Campaign Goes On'" thread. You'll truly be sickened.
Reply to this comment
by marcodele March 23, 2007 3:04 PM EDT
I dread the compassionate christian conservative neocon attack on Elizabeth Edwards that will surely come soon. I'll bet Anne Coulter already has a chapter on it.
Reply to this comment
by marcodele March 23, 2007 3:04 PM EDT
I dread the compassionate christian conservative neocon attack on Elizabeth Edwards that will surely come soon. I'll bet Anne Coulter already has a chapter on it.
Reply to this comment
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