Edwards Continues To Court Rural Voters
On The Stump And In New Video, Democrat Seeks Support Of Crucial Bloc In Iowa
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Democratic presidential hopeful, John Edwards, speaks to supporters Thursday, Dec. 20, 2007 during a campaign stop in Council Bluffs, Iowa. (AP)
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Video Edwards Got Game "Only On The Web": John Edwards shows some skill on the basketball court as he sinks jump shots in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
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Video Edwards Aggressive In Iowa Less than three weeks before the Iowa caucuses, former Sen. John Edwards (D-N.C.) speaks with Bob Schieffer about last-minute campaign strategies.
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Photo Essay John Edwards In his second presidential campaign, Edwards ran as a populist, with a focus on poverty and health.
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News Tools Campaign Calendar The latest list of primary and caucus dates as states continue jockeying for position.
Edwards opened his latest Iowa campaign swing with stops in heavily Republican and rural western Iowa, talking up proposals to bolster rural sections of the country. He routinely talks about being born in rural South Carolina and growing up in a series of southern mill towns.
With two weeks remaining before the state's precinct caucuses on Jan. 3, and locked in a tight race with Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton, Edwards sought to stand out from the pack. He dismissed Obama's and Clinton's argument that they are positioned to bring about change in Washington by arguing that he is the candidate who is promising to confront the power elite directly to improve the fortunes of the poor and middle class.
"We are going to take on these people who are stealing your children's future," Edwards said.
"What it takes is a president who uses the bully pulpit to bring the American people behind them," he said. "This is not rocket science. The rich are getting richer and what happened to the middle class. We need to have the strength and backbone to stand up to them.
"We are going to give you back the real Democratic Party," Edwards said.
By stumping across rural areas of the state, Edwards was trying to take advantage of a twist in Iowa's complex caucus system that encourages Democrats to campaign in traditionally Republican and rural areas. Under the system, candidates who can demonstrate support broadly throughout the state can collect more delegates than those whose supporters are clustered in a few urban areas.
"You can have 90,000 people in a city and there are only so many delegates you can get," said Edwards adviser Joe Trippi. "We're playing everywhere because we think we are the only candidate who can play everywhere."
Edwards argued that his ties to rural America make a natural tie with rural voters. He debuted a new campaign video with colorful images and his parents talking about his modest upbringing, including that his father had to borrow $50 to bring him and his mother home from the hospital after he was born.
Joining him on the campaign swing was Dave "Mudcat" Saunders, a fellow Southerner who advises Edwards on rural issues.
Meeting afterward with reporters, Edwards said his populist theme resonates with rural voters.
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- Edwards is the only candidate I can think of that was poor most of his formative years. At least he has some idea of what it is to work for a living.
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- Edwards'' problem is that he doesn''t believe in moral values, only political.
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