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Kerry’s Crafty Operator: Republicans would be wise not to underestimate John Edwards
The New York Sun ^ | July 7, 2004 | Walter Olson

Posted on 07/08/2004 10:09:16 AM PDT by xsysmgr



    The Republican National Committee thinks it’s got plenty of ammunition to use against Senator Kerry’s vice presidential pick, Senator Edwards: his voting record, the fourth most liberal in the Senate last year, according to National Journal; his pronounced lack of experience in governance and specifically in military and foreign matters; the contrast between his hush-puppy populism and the luxe trimmings of his lifestyle — when the Edwardses traded up from their Massachusetts Avenue mansion in Washington, D.C., to an even nicer mansion on P Street, they disposed of the old one for $3 million to the government of Hungary to use as its embassy.

Central to the attack is going to be Mr. Edwards’s status as a phenomenally successful trial lawyer, who after amassing a fortune of at least $38 million in his home state of North Carolina went on to politics and a national role as spokesman for the litigation biz second in effectiveness only to Ralph Nader himself.

    One early consequence of Mr. Edwards’s selection, it seems safe to predict, will be to galvanize the business and medical communities. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, for example, has vowed to abandon its usual stance of neutrality and work actively against an Edwards-Kerry ticket.

    As for doctors, before entering politics Mr. Edwards won some of his biggest contingency fees representing families of children with cerebral palsy against the M.D.’s who’d allegedly botched their deliveries — although a pile of research dating back to the 1980s tends to refute the popular theory that this affliction is commonly caused by obstetricians’ conduct during labor and delivery. (Mr. Edwards himself is careful to claim that he took on only very strong cases.)

    The issue had already surfaced in the Democratic primaries. In discussions of the skimpiness of Mr. Edwards’s senatorial record, for example, it was sometimes noted that the short list of legislative objectives for which he’s been willing to go to bat include many important to his trial lawyer confreres, such as blocking limits on post-terrorism lawsuits.

    It was Senator Kerry’s press secretary — not some Bush operative — who earlier this year described Mr. Edwards’s campaign as “wholly funded by trial lawyers,” and the response to such criticism by Mr. Edwards’s spokeswoman, Jennifer Palmieri,was more revealing yet: “We have no problem if 100 percent of our money came from trial lawyers.”

    The GOP’s criticisms will perhaps be tinged with envy, though, because Mr. Edwards is now certain to place at Kerry’s disposal one of the most fabulous political fund-raising machines in all history. That lawyer-driven machine did extremely well for Mr. Edwards in the primaries; the only reason it didn’t do even better is that it ran into the ceilings imposed by federal election finance law, which limit donations from individual donors to $2,000. In fact, Mr. Edwards raised a bigger proportion of his campaign war chest in $2,000 donations than any of his Democratic rivals.The list of donors who maxed out included not only the expected plaintiff’s attorneys and their spouses, but also a roster of low-paid paralegals, receptionists, and other support staffers of law firms along with their spouses — even though (as an investigation for the Hill revealed) some of the staffers had recently suffered bankruptcies and other personal financial reverses and some were not recorded as having voted in years.

    “In many instances, all the checks from a given firm arrived on the same day — from partners, attorneys, and other support staff,” reported The Hill. The law-firm employees duly denied that their employers had signaled any willingness to reimburse the donations — that would constitute a violation of federal law, after all. But pursuing the money trail was not easy, since Mr. Edwards, alone among major candidates, refused to disclose the identities of the big financiers who bundled checks for him, a stance that drew fire from places like the editorial page of the Washington Post.

    Impressively, throughout all this, Mr. Edwards managed to make a personal selling point of his proclaimed freedom from entanglement with those dreadful special interests. It’s in the field of rhetoric that the senator’s career skill in jury persuasion really comes through for him. As journalist Stuart Taylor Jr. puts it, Mr. Edwards sounds as if he really, truly believes “that behind every misfortune there must be a wealthy villain” — at the grand level of national policy just as in the particulars of an individual client’s calamity. It’s as if Michael Moore checked into a spa and finishing school and emerged with good looks and polished manners: No wonder party activists swoon.

    Significantly, Mr. Edwards has already moved to inoculate himself against the charge that he is nothing more than a spokesman for his interest group. Asked about so-called frivolous litigation, he says forthrightly that it’s wrong and he would stop it — an interesting departure from the usual trial lawyer songbook, which tends to begin with the idea that what seems frivolous to one observer may not seem so to another and proceeds to the conclusion that any curbs on such litigation would therefore endanger legitimate suits.

    Mr. Edwards is aware, of course, that the currently regnant definition of “frivolous” in American courts is much narrower than many lay people realize — a lawsuit can be thoroughly erroneous in its factual basis without being frivolous — which means his concession does not concede nearly as much territory as listeners may think it does.

    There’s more. In an op-ed last year, Mr. Edwards went so far as to endorse a notion that goes beyond anything the tort reform movement has promoted: “Lawyers who file three frivolous cases should be forbidden to bring another suit for the next 10 years — in other words, three strikes and you’re out.” Sounds like strong medicine, doesn’t it? But — as Mr. Edwards surely knows — this particular proposal is utterly unlikely to win enactment at the federal level, the only level he need care about. One reason is that most lawsuits go forward in state court and Congress has little interest in micromanaging the disciplinary practices of the 50 state court systems. So it serves the purpose of a free and handsome gesture, with little danger that it will actually go anywhere.

    He’s a crafty operator. Republicans should not underestimate him.

Mr. Olson is senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute and author of “The Rule of Lawyers,” newly out in paperback from St. Martin’s/Griffin.


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: edwards; kerry

1 posted on 07/08/2004 10:09:17 AM PDT by xsysmgr
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To: xsysmgr

Title correction, underestimate = misunderestimate


2 posted on 07/08/2004 10:18:12 AM PDT by TexasTransplant ("You know, I think the best possible social program is a job" Ronald W. Reagan)
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To: xsysmgr

I think the Kerry/Edwards campaign has made a serious mistake straight out of the blocks. They've made this campaign about class again - the rich versus the poor and middle class. I just don't think that the American electorate is as interested in that as they used to be. "Get the rich" campaigning won't work as well.

The American electorate, I think, is more into values, and protecting their families from terrorism. Edwards and KErry don't seem to have a coherent plan, and that is their weakness.


3 posted on 07/08/2004 10:25:31 AM PDT by Zack Nguyen
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To: xsysmgr

KERRY and EDWARDS,vote for these two.
you'll be casting a vote for the ACLU.

Uncle George


4 posted on 07/08/2004 10:36:26 AM PDT by Uncle George
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To: xsysmgr

Beware of amblulance chasers, junk yard dogs and hookers with STDs.


5 posted on 07/08/2004 10:40:47 AM PDT by Tacis (,)
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To: xsysmgr

LOL More like Kerry better not underestimate Edwards.


6 posted on 07/08/2004 11:01:12 AM PDT by GottaLuvAkitas1 (Ronald Reagan is the TRUE "Father Of Our Country".)
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To: xsysmgr
Asked about so-called frivolous litigation, he says forthrightly that it’s wrong and he would stop it

He has proposed to set up committees to decide whether a lawsuit is frivolous. And who will sit on the committees? Other tort lawyers!

The only reason he is able to get away with such a stupid proposal is that his only questioners so far have been Democrats.

7 posted on 07/08/2004 11:04:20 AM PDT by Aegedius (Veni, vidi, icked-kay utt-bay.)
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To: xsysmgr

In January the New York Times described this great moment in personal-injury law:

"In 1985, a 31-year-old North Carolina lawyer named John Edwards stood before a jury and channeled the words of an unborn baby girl.

"Referring to an hour-by-hour record of a fetal heartbeat monitor, Mr. Edwards told the jury: "She said at 3, 'I'm fine.' She said at 4, 'I'm having a little trouble, but I'm doing O.K.' Five, she said, 'I'm having problems.' At 5:30, she said, 'I need out.' "

"But the obstetrician, he argued in an artful blend of science and passion, failed to heed the call. By waiting 90 more minutes to perform a breech delivery, rather than immediately performing a Caesarean section, Mr. Edwards said, the doctor permanently damaged the girl's brain."


* * *


Best of the Web Today, July 8, 2004: At the vice-presidential debate this fall, someone should ask Sen. Edwards to demonstrate this technique by channeling the words of an unborn baby about to undergo a partial-birth abortion.

8 posted on 07/08/2004 4:27:54 PM PDT by OESY
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To: xsysmgr

I remember when Johnny Boy won his Senate seat from Loch Faircloth. Loch would never call Johnny Boy out as a trial lawyer.

The scuttlebutt was that if Loch made a big deal out of Edwards being a trial lawyer, Johnny Boy would drag out the little girl who got her guts sucked out.

Well, Johnny Boy suckered Loch into not campaigning to keep his seat.

Let's hope that Bush's team in DC gets the message.


9 posted on 07/08/2004 4:34:08 PM PDT by TC Rider (The United States Constitution © 1791. All Rights Reserved.)
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To: xsysmgr; All

I think there's something to be said for this article.

Two days ago, Hugh Hewitt had a guy on his show who was North Carolina political consultant and also a democrat. I'm sorry but I can't recall his name.

This consultant said that it'd be a mistake to underestimate Edwards' political skills and organizing abilities.

I realize that running as a VP is a far different game than the US Senate but I think we should all beware of Edwards' "aw-shucks" demeanor.

BTW, this political consultant backed Lauch Faircloth in 1998 and took a great deal of heat for it from Edwards and his allies.


10 posted on 07/08/2004 4:44:16 PM PDT by MplsSteve
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