| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 7:18:06 AM | It was only a matter of time. He couldn't win his home state and was underfunded. Clinton and Obama are going to want this endorsement. I say given the tone of the debates he gives it to Obama. And then he gets the nod for VP from Obama.
John Edwards to quit presidential race By NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press Writer 11 minutes ago
Democrat John Edwards is exiting the presidential race Wednesday, ending a scrappy underdog bid in which he steered his rivals toward progressive ideals while grappling with family hardship that roused voters' sympathies, The Associated Press has learned.
The two-time White House candidate notified a close circle of senior advisers that he planned to make the announcement at a 1 p.m. EST event in New Orleans that had been billed as a speech on poverty, according to two aides. The decision came after Edwards lost the four states to hold nominating contests so far to rivals who stole the spotlight from the beginning — Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama.
The former North Carolina senator will not immediately endorse either candidate in what is now a two-person race for the Democratic nomination, said one adviser, who spoke on condition of anonymity in advance of the announcement. Both candidates would welcome Edwards' backing and the support of the 56 delegates he had collected.
Edwards waged a spirited top-tier campaign against the two better-funded rivals, even as he dealt with the stunning blow of his wife's recurring cancer diagnosis. In a dramatic news conference last March, the couple announced that the breast cancer that she thought she had beaten had returned, but they would continue the campaign.
Their decision sparked a debate about family duty and public service. But Elizabeth Edwards remained a forceful advocate for her husband, and she was often surrounded at campaign events by well-wishers and emotional survivors cheering her on.
Edwards planned to announce his campaign was ending with his wife and three children at his side. Then he planned to work with Habitat for Humanity at the volunteer-fueled rebuilding project Musicians' Village, the adviser said.
With that, Edwards' campaign will end the way it began 13 months ago — with the candidate pitching in to rebuild lives in a city still ravaged by Hurricane Katrina. Edwards embraced New Orleans as a glaring symbol of what he described as a Washington that didn't hear the cries of the downtrodden.
Edwards burst out of the starting gate with a flurry of progressive policy ideas — he was the first to offer a plan for universal health care, the first to call on Congress to pull funding for the war, and he led the charge that lobbyists have too much power in Washington and need to be reigned in.
The ideas were all bold and new for Edwards personally as well, making him a different candidate than the moderate Southerner who ran in 2004 while still in his first Senate term. But the themes were eventually adopted by other Democratic presidential candidates — and even a Republican, Mitt Romney, echoed the call for an end to special interest politics in Washington.
Edwards' rise to prominence in politics came amid just one term representing North Carolina in the Senate after a career as a trial attorney that made him millions. He was on Al Gore's short list for vice president in 2000 after serving just two years in office. He ran for president in 2004, and after he lost to John Kerry, the nominee picked him as a running mate.
Elizabeth Edwards first discovered a lump in her breast in the final days of that losing campaign. Her battle against the disease caused her husband to open up about another tragedy in their lives — the death of their teenage son Wade in a 1996 car accident. The candidate barely spoke of Wade during his 2004 campaign, but he offered his son's death to answer questions about how he could persevere when his wife could die.
Edwards made poverty the signature issue of both his presidential campaigns, and he led a four-day tour to highlight the issue in July. The tour was the first to focus on the plight of the poor since Robert F. Kennedy's trip 40 years earlier.
But even as Obama and Clinton collected astonishing amounts of money that dwarfed his fundraising effort, Edwards maintained a loyal following in the first voting state of Iowa that made him a serious contender. He came in second to Obama in Iowa, an impressive feat of relegating Clinton to third place, before coming in third in the following three contests.
The loss in South Carolina was especially hard because it was where he was born and he had won the state in 2004. | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 7:32:35 AM | | A sad day indeed. One of the only ones out there speaking for the people.... | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 7:33:07 AM | I'm glad but I'd love to know who whispered in his ear the way McCain whispered to Giuliani. He was seen chatting with Clinton after the last debate. In a week or two I may start taunting the Dems to go ahead and jump if they nominate the wrong person.
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 7:59:51 AM | It's too bad that Edwards is pulling out. I thought he was a good alternative to the other two candidates on the Democrat side. Edwards is articulate; seems to care about the disenfranchised; and ran a clean, positive campaign. Hillary Clinton is a cold, ambitious technocrat, and Obama is a glib, motivational speaker. Neither Clinton nor Obama are all that experienced---Obama actually has more legislative experience than Hillary does because of his years in the Illinois state senate.
The way the media are covering the campaign is ridiculous, as usual. They are into "conflict" news which completely obscures the voter issues and concentrates on race, gender, and the ad hominem attacks of each candidate on the others. I'm tuning the whole process out until I go to vote. | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 8:20:55 AM | | edwards is a jackass, hes running around talking about the 2 americas, well i guess edwards is right about that there are 2, theres him and then 95% of the rest of us. i guess we should know better then to listen to a trial lawyer shouldnt we? edwards is a joke, so heres his story , became a lawyer, sue people , become a billonaire, then tell people that the system is stacked against them,that is absurd.would that not make him part of the problem and not the soultion? | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 8:44:31 AM | | He's a good man. I've been very impressed with his demeanor throughout the debates. | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 9:21:15 AM | | I so didn't want to go there rsx. Really, I could do without that mental image. | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 9:33:09 AM | It's sad that edwards is pulling out he really was the only real canidate that might be able to bring this country out of the downward spiral its in.
hes running around talking about the 2 americas, well i guess edwards is right about that there are 2, theres him and then 95% of the rest of us.
Grew up poor, worked his arse off to become educated, made his fortune and then watched at the methods and means that helped him achive his goals get taken out. Went to try and get them restored and help 99% of americans and then you have people like the above quoter who can't even realize they're being had. People wonder why I get jaded.
Just can't save people from themselves. | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 10:35:45 AM |
Bush senior shoulda pulled out in 1946
Spew alert!
Man that was funny. To bad I got the image of George and Barbara.....kinda yucky!
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 10:46:16 AM | When he makes his annoucement he plans to go to work for Habitat for Humanity in New Orleans. Not some photo op like someone else...
I must say that I was really impressed when he chose to keep running after his wife learned her days were numbered, that took guts on both of their parts. | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 11:29:10 AM | | whats means did he use to make his forturne, what hard work? well thats still available to the people. u can still be most anything u want in this country with hard work. also i dont need u to " save me from myself", your OPINION is yours and mine is mine.last never wondered or cared if u get jaded, just thought i would tell u !!!! | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 2:45:02 PM | | No doubt there are problems in the democratic party, with this obsessions on race and gender the issues have taken a back seat. With all the problems this current adminstration has left us facing, change and experience are going to be needed. The republicans and yes some democrats are ignoring the fact, that this country is on a fast track to ruin. I honestly think Edwards is going to side with Hilary, and we might just see him as vice president. | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 3:08:34 PM | | I really thought Edwards would emerge as a "compromise" canidate if you will. I was wrong to say the least. I have long thought both Hillary and Barrack were not electable. I think Hillary gets the nod now and I'm hoping I will be proven wrong again. The general election is now going to be a dogfight when given when the historical record of the this millenia we should have walked backed into the Oval Office. | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 3:21:16 PM | | You can bet your grandma that there are a whole lot of repubs sighing with relief that he's out because they aren't scared of Hillary or Obama. They are going to shred them to little bits. What a mess.... | |
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edisto
| Joined: 9/11/2007 Msg: 16 | |
| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 4:05:33 PM | ^^^^^^ okay, I've got to ask why you feel that Hillary and/or Obama can not beat the likes of Romney or McCain- I 100% disagree with you so please explain | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 4:10:38 PM | | someone said that Edwards was born poor and worked his ass off to become educated and successful...so what is stoping that from being done today. | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 4:12:46 PM | Does anyone else see this as one possible way to wind up as a VP on someone else's ticket ?
If you realize you can't win it, then you regroup. Staying in the battle risks causing more bad blood with the other candidates. It also marks you as a "loser".
"John Edwards has spent a lifetime fighting to give voice to the voiceless and hope to the struggling, even when it wasn't popular to do or covered in the news. At a time when our politics is too focused on who's up and who's down, he made a nation focus again on who matters - the New Orleans child without a home, the West Virginia miner without a job, the families who live in that other America that is not seen or heard or talked about by our leaders in Washington. John and Elizabeth Edwards have always believed deeply that we can change this - that two Americans can become one, and that our country can rally around this common purpose. So while his campaign may end today, the cause of their lives endures for all of us who still believe that we can achieve that dream of one America."
Sen. Barack Obama , on Edwards withdrawal.
Obama/Edwards anyone ?  | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 4:14:38 PM | I commented on this before right after one of your other posts edisto - America is not about to vote for a woman or black man(I know he's half) right now. We are just not that forward thinking. I'm not talking about me, I just feel the pulse of the american voter. I was director of marketing for a internet company because of my ability to peg where people are at and the US just isn't there yet, as much as we wish it were....
and sure MG anything can happen. I would give Obama a much better chance with Edwards but still, racism is alive and well. All I have to do is grow a beard and I get all kinds of crap including being called Osama and I'm not even an Arab. I've grown up with racism all around me. | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 4:46:16 PM | | It's about time "Oh, look at me, I'm a nice guy" dropped out. When he was acting the spoiler between Obama and Clinton and taking votes from Obama, he was adamant in staying. Now that he is taking votes from Clinton, he drops out. His votes from California would probably go to Clinton. Nice deal between the effeminate camped in Iowa for three years and the female Bruno. | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 5:06:56 PM | | I can't imagine why either would want him as VP. He's got no experience, couldn't win his home state, and got reamed in the VP debate with Penis Cheney last time around. What does he add to the ticket? | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 5:11:59 PM | | A white man who shares the same core values as Obama ? | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 5:37:57 PM | Spitfire 6844, I agree with what you've said completely.
And I don't like either alternative- Obama or Clinton. I have the overwhelming feeling of "this is the best the Dems can offer?"
I am glad to be a registered Independant in times like these. | |
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| Edwards pulling out. Posted: 1/30/2008 10:47:02 PM | | ..........as someone already said....the Reps are breathing a sigh of relief with Edwards bowing out!..........with the only viable threat (to challenge any of the Reps front-runners) gone....the Reps will be more emboldened to deal with either Hilary ( a polarizing figure, who is as fake as her press-on finger nails), or an inexperienced Obama who is often glib and awe-struck that he is in the position that he is in...........the Reps will build their case to tradionalists in the southern and middle states (the states whose voters historically determine the outcome of the presidency), and hope to sway the independants and uncommitted voters by whatever means necessary. | |
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