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Edwards, Out Of The Early States, In His Element

04 Oct 2007 04:17 pm

COLUMBUS, KENTUCKY -- The last time Columbus, Kentucky was even mentioned in connection with a president was probably more than 200 years ago, when Thomas Jefferson tinkered with the idea of asking Congress to make this river city the capital of the country.

To see presidential candidate John Edwards, schools let out early. Four of them made it a field trip for civic students. It seemed like the entire town of about 300 people showed up, and then some, because police officers thought the crowd exceeded 1,500. The campaign brought the bar-b-que.

Edwards spoke on a bluff overlooking the Mississippi River. A restored Civil War cannon was anchored to the ground about ten feet away. He promised to speak for only a few minutes and answer questions, but then he took some luxury in knowing that these folks had probably never
heard his stump speech before.

“Rural America is who I am, part of who I am,” he said, twice. “I know who you are. I care about what you care about.” When [if] they see Edwards walk across the White House lawn, “I want you to say, that’s my president. He believes in what I believe in.” 25 minutes later, he was done.

Most of the crowd stayed to hear the question-and-answer session. Edwards was asked about health care, education, the Iraq war, nuclear power (a big local issue here), rural policies, the Arab Israeli conflict. At one point, Edwards tried a metaphor: “You don’t make a hog better by weighing,” he said, referring to No Child Left Behind testing metrics. The crowd laughed. That surprised Edwards – that line doesn’t generally compute in New Hampshire and even parts of Iowa. “Kentucky’s a place I can use that line.”

Edwards was sweating heavily by the end of the speech. He spent the next twenty minutes shaking hands. He ducked into his campaign car, toweled off, grabbed a drink of cold war, and then bounded out to a small press conference with reporters.

Comments (10)

"You don’t make a hog better by weighing".

There's a small-town North Carolina boy.

I think Edwards got dealt a pretty good hand by the Interweb here: a chance to go down South and show off the kind of campaigning and message that could go a long way towards putting states in play that had been off the map for Dems in the general election for quite some time now. Run, John, run.

I still think it's odd that he is campaigning in Kentucky. Ideally, it would be nice if all the candidates campaigned all across the country. Sadly, our primary campaign forces them to focus on a very few states.

Marc - Don't forget U.S. Grant's commanding of the US forces at the Civil War Battle of Belmont a few miles away from Columbus. Okay, that's only small point of contention...

http://political-buzz.com/

"a drink of cold war"?

:)

Thanks for covering the Edwards event.

I sure hope Edwards gets the nomination because he really IS for the little guys. It's about time we had a president in the Whitehouse that wasn't owned by the insiders. At the last debate one of the press guys on MSNBC let it slip that the "insiders" don't like Edwards. I think that's one of the reasons why he doesn't get as much national press coverage and it's a big reason why we like him so much.

press guys on MSNBC let it slip that the "insiders" don't like Edwards

That would be Chuck Todd, NBC Political Director.

And Marc here has documented such sentiment in this very space.

I also caught Chuck Todd's comment on MSNBC about the Washington insiders (not liking John)following John Edwards' great performance in the last debate. What more do you need? ---All the more reason to vote for John!

Mike - the reason he was campaigning in Kentucky is because the small town of Columbus KY won a visit from John Edwards in an online contest. I hope people will soon realize that Edwards is the only real deal.

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