John Edwards 2008: What’s not to like

January 25, 2008

And then there’s John Edwards

WASHINGTON — There’s losing. There’s losing honorably. And then there’s John Edwards.

-snip

Then there is John Edwards. He’s not going to be president either. He stays in the race because, with the Democrats’ proportional representation system, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton might end up in a very close delegate race — perhaps allowing an also-ran with, say, 10 percent of the delegates to act as kingmaker at the convention.

It’s a prize of sorts, it might even be tradeable for a Cabinet position. But at considerable cost. His campaign has been a spectacle.

Edwards has made much of his renunciation of his Iraq War vote. But he has not stopped there. His entire campaign has been an orgy of regret and renunciation.

– As senator, he voted in 2001 for a bankruptcy bill that he now denounces.

– As senator, he voted for storing nuclear waste in Nevada’s Yucca Mountain. Twice. He is now fiercely opposed.

– As senator, he voted for the Bush-Kennedy No Child Left Behind education reform. He now campaigns against it, promising to have it “radically overhauled.”

– As senator, he voted for the Patriot Act, calling it “a good bill … and I am pleased to support it.” He now attacks it.

– As senator, he voted to give China normalized trade relations. Need I say? He now campaigns against liberalized trade with China as a sellout of the middle class to the great multinational agents of greed, etc.

Breathtaking. People can change their minds about something. But everything? The man served one term in the Senate. He left not a single substantial piece of legislation to his name, only an astonishing string of votes on trade, education, civil liberties, energy, bankruptcy and, of course, war that now he not only renounces but inveighs against.

Today he plays the avenging angel, engaged in an “epic struggle” against the great economic malefactors that “have literally,” he assures us, “taken over the government.” He is angry, embodying the familiar zeal of the convert, ready to immolate anyone who benightedly holds to any revelation other than the zealot’s very latest.

Nothing new about a convert. Nothing new about a zealous convert. What is different about Edwards is his endlessly repeated claim that the raging populist of today is what he has always been. That this has been the “cause of my life,” the very core of his being, ingrained in him on his father’s knee or at the mill or wherever, depending on the anecdote he’s telling. You must understand: This is not politics for him. “This fight is deeply personal to me. I’ve been engaged in it my whole life.”

Except for his years as senator, the only public office he’s ever held. The audacity of the all-my-life trope is staggering. By his own endlessly self-confessed record, his current pose is a coat of paint newly acquired. His claim that it is an expression of his inner soul is a farce.

A cynical farce that is particularly galling to left-liberals of real authenticity. “The one (presidential candidate) that is the most problematic is Edwards,” Sen. Russ Feingold told The Post-Crescent in Appleton, Wis., “who voted for the Patriot Act, campaigns against it. Voted for No Child Left Behind, campaigns against it. Voted for the China trade deal, campaigns against it. Voted for the Iraq War. … He uses my voting record exactly as his platform, even though he had the opposite voting record.”

It profits a man nothing to sell his soul for the whole world. But for 4 percent of the Nevada caucuses?

Washington Post 1/25/08

November 18, 2007

Edwards believed faulty science on Yucca Mountain, doesn’t anymore

John Edwards, when he was a North Carolina senator, voted twice to open the dump and once against it.

snip

The former 2004 vice presidential nominee’s has a mixed record on the issue.

After he was selected as Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry’s running mate, Edwards announced he would defer to Kerry’s anti-Yucca position and promised Nevada Sen. Harry Reid he would fight the project.

The former North Carolina senator has said he was trying to protect his constituents by supporting the dump in Nevada.

“We had an issue in North Carolina where they were going to start storing nuclear waste in North Carolina unless we had some other place for the nuclear waste,” Edwards said on his first stop in Nevada as a presidential candidate. But looking at the project from a “national perspective” it doesn’t work, he added.

Edwards now says faulty science was used to support the Yucca Mountain project, and he doesn’t believe nuclear energy is a safe energy source.

Nevada Appeal 11/18/07
http://www.nevadaappeal.com/article/20071118/ELECTIONS/111180127

John Edwards’ private island home

Filed under: Environment, Finances, Real Estate — is @ 2:23 pm
Figure Eight Island was developed in the 1960s, when a group of wealthy men from Wilmington vowed to create North Carolina’s answer to coastal resort towns in Georgia and South Carolina.It is relatively small. About 460 houses are spread down the island’s 4 1/2 miles of landscaped roads and cul-de-sacs. Most have more than 3,000 square feet. About 50 have more than 5,000 square feet, according to property records.

Property sold in the past six months had an average value of $2.2 million.

The island has no commercial development — only a yacht club that is far more modest than most houses around it.

Its most famous homeowners are Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards and his wife, Elizabeth. Also owning a house there: Charlotte lawyer and N.C. Board of Transportation member Marion Cowell, N.C. School of the Arts founder Thomas S. Kenan III and several descendants of the Stanback headache-medicine fortune.

Unlike most other barrier islands along the N.C. coast, it remains privately controlled. There’s no sign for the island at the turn off U.S. 17. A guardhouse waits ahead, and a uniformed guard demands a pass before letting visitors cross a bridge.

The beach itself is public — for those who can get there by boat.

snip

A coalition of 14 environmental groups has sent a letter to legislators, arguing that no pilot project is needed to protect “a dozen summer mansions” because the effects of a terminal groin are well known.

“Although Figure Eight is a (private) island,” the letter reads, “its ocean beach and inlets belong to the public and should not be barricaded with hardened structures.”

Charlotte Observer 11/18/07
http://www.charlotte.com/171/story/368026.html

November 15, 2007

Yucca Mountain: Do not call this waffling

Filed under: 2008 Primary, Debates, Nuclear waste, flipping — is @ 6:22 pm
By the way, the position of the top three Democratic candidates on putting spent nuclear fuel inside Yucca Mountain are as follows:

Obama: No.

Clinton: Absolutely, positively, I-will-chain-myself-to-the-foothills no.

Edwards: The fact that I once voted yes should not be interpreted as anything but a no. And do not call this waffling. There is only one waffler in this pack, and I don’t even like the way she dresses.

Something weird is going on with John Edwards, who was cheerfulness incarnate when four years ago he was the moderate-Southerner-who-can-speak-to-the-Reagan-Democrats. Then he morphed into a sorrowful populist who thought we should vote for him because he cared the most about the poor. Now he’s running around like a rabid gerbil, telling people he should be president because he’s the angriest. Soon, he’s going to run out of adjectives to embody.

New York Times 11/15/07
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/15/opinion/15collins.html

November 13, 2007

Yucca Mountain

Filed under: 2008 Primary, Energy, Environment, Senate Voting Record — is @ 4:56 pm
The former 2004 vice presidential nominee’s has a mixed record on the issue.

After he was selected as Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry’s running mate, Edwards announced he would defer to Kerry’s anti-Yucca position and promised Nevada Sen. Harry Reid he would fight the project.

The former North Carolina senator has said he was trying to protect his constituents, who didn’t want to store nuclear waste in their state, when he voted in favor of the project.

Edwards now says faulty science was used to support the Yucca Mountain project, and he doesn’t believe nuclear energy is a safe energy source.

Associated Press 11/13/07
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5gkRv5G9MNDoPpuqffLVp83tZmvMAD8SSLP480

October 21, 2007

What about Edwards’s vote on Yucca Mountain?

Q: You’re against the nuclear waste dump at Yucca Mountain, but why wasn’t the project halted while you were Energy Secretary?

A: What do you mean halted? Well, I wasn’t going to close it down. But when I was secretary they couldn’t bring the waste in, and I stopped that. Because there was a determination there were serious water problems.

Q: Why weren’t you going to shut it down?

A: Well you can’t shut it down. There are thousands of jobs there. I want to make it a national laboratory. I want to make it into a research facility. I wouldn’t have it as a depository. I would switch it’s focus. We cannot expand nuclear power in this country until we figure out what we are going to do with the waste. The two options on the table are unworkable …

Ask (former U.S.) Senator (Richard) Bryan who was his biggest ally in making sure it didn’t move forward? Why don’t you ask (former U.S.) Senator (John) Edwards why he voted for it? Check the record. I don’t need to defend that.

Reno Gazette-Journal 10/21/07
http://news.rgj.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071021/NEWS/710210339/1321

October 15, 2007

Glenn Hurowitz of Democratic Courage endorsed John Edwards

Edwards has already earned the endorsement of several influential environmental leaders, including:National Environmentalists for Edwards Leaders
Scott Rutledge, Nevada Conservation Leader
Lana Pollack, National LCV Board Member*
Lisa Guthrie, National LCV Board Member, Executive Director of VA LCV*
Carrie Clark, National LCV Board Member, Executive Director of NC Conservation Council*
Brownie Newman, Political Director NC Conservation Council*
Nina Szolsberg, President of NC Conservation Council*
Carol Piszczek-Sheffield, Board Member AZ Sierra Club Chapter*
Jeff Anderson, CA Environmental Business Leader
Gail Slocum, Former Mayor of Menlo Park, CA/ Chief Environmental Consultant for Emerging Sustainability Technologies, Pacific Gas & Electric*
Sara Feldman, Vice President for Southern CA, CA State Parks Foundation*
Kevin Mueller, Executive Director Utah Environmental Congress*
Jim Marston, Director of Energy Programs for Environmental Defense Fund TX*
Joseph Minott, Executive Director of PA Clean Air Council*
James Coman, Executive Director of Blue Ridge Land Trust*
Lance Holter, Board Member of HI Sierra Club, Chair of Maui Sierra Club Chapter*
Glen Hurowitz, Principal of Democratic Courage
Jared Duval, Writer, Former National Director of Sierra Student Coalition*
Molly Diggins, NC Environmental Leader
Bill Holman, Former Secretary of NC Department of Environmental and Natural Resources
David Knight, Director of Government Relations of Nature Conservancy North Carolina Chapter*

Source: Edwards 08 Press Release 10/15/07

September 10, 2007

Edwards not as green as you thought

Filed under: 2008 Primary, Coal, Environment — is @ 11:19 am
Dem presidential candidate Chris Dodd has called for such a policy in blunt language: “The Dodd Plan requires all new plants to capture and sequester CO2. No exceptions.”

Most enviros seem to think that John Edwards has also called for such a moratorium, and have lauded him for it.

Only he hasn’t.

Edwards would require that all new coal plants be compatible with sequestration — that they be IGCC plants, which make CO2 easier to separate and bury — but he would not require them to actually sequester their emissions.

Is this worth worrying about? Yes. As Big Coal author Jeff Goodell says, “There is a big difference — a rhetorical Grand Canyon — between supporting coal plants that are ‘compatible with’ CCS and actually requiring them to do it.”

The key thing to note is that IGCC plants emit 80-90% as much CO2 as old-school dirty coal plants (they are somewhat more efficient). An IGCC plant without sequestration is almost as bad as a dirty coal plant, from a climate-change perspective (though it emits less NOx, SOx, and mercury).

If we build a bunch of coal plants — whether they’re IGCC or not — we will be committing to sequestration (if we’re to have any hope of slowing global warming). It’s either that or shutting them down. So if President Edwards requires energy companies to build IGCC plants, he will have done very little to slow global warming. What he will have done is lock us into a policy path we’ve never rationally assessed or chosen.

snip

If Edwards is serious about climate change, he will follow Dodd and support a ban on coal plants that don’t have operating sequestration facilities.

Grist Magazine 9/10/07
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/9/10/172519/037

September 9, 2007

John Edwards exempts himself from sacrifices

Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards is making it more and more clear that, in his mind, there indeed are ‘‘two Americas.’’ One of them is for the vast majority of us, who should make lifestyle changes simply because Edwards believes it’s the right thing to do. The other one is for Edwards, who seems to have decided that he is exempt from any such ethical mandates.

During a candidates’ forum held by the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, Edwards said that he believes ‘‘Americans are actually willing to sacrifice’’ in order to meet energy and environmental challenges. ‘‘One of the things they should be asked to do is drive more fuel-efficient vehicles,’’ he explained.

Edwards was asked if that means that Americans should give up the sport utility vehicles millions drive, in favor of smaller, more fuel-efficient cars. ‘‘Yes,’’ he replied. Later, he was asked how that suggestion can be reconciled with his own lifestyle. Specifically, his 28,000-square-foot mansion was mentioned.

‘‘I have no apologies whatsoever for what I’ve done with my life,’’ Edwards responded. He pointed out his humble beginnings and said he has worked hard to achieve his lifestyle.

We suspect that most SUV owners work hard, too. Many of them have pulled themselves up by their own bootstraps, and believe that they’ve earned a luxury or two in life.

But not according to Edwards. While he and his family use more energy and create more pollution than some entire neighborhoods elsewhere in America, it’s the rest of us who need to make sacrifices, in his mind.

It seems that Edwards does believe there are ‘‘two Americas’’ — one for him and one for the rest of us.

Tribune-Chronicle/editorial

http://www.tribune-chronicle.com/Editorials/articles.asp?articleID=22297

September 8, 2007

Off the Record: I prefer an SUV over a ‘Nanocar’

Filed under: 2008 Primary, Energy, Environment, Negative Campaigning, Transparency — none @ 3:56 pm
John Edwards — a guy who owns a 28,000-square-foot mansion in North Carolina on a 100-acre property formerly inhabited by a large number of trees; a guy who spends $400 for a haircut; a guy who flies around in a fuel-guzzling, environment-polluting private jet; and a guy who owns at least three SUVs — has the audacity, gall, procacity, et al, to tell me to give up my SUV and trade it in for something like a “Nanocar.”

And save the world in the process.

The location where the Democratic presidential candidate made his plea last week was appropriate, I thought — Disney World.

This man definitely lives in fantasy land.

snip: After his Florida fantasy land speech, Edwards was chauffeured away in a Cadillac SRX Crossover, which swallowed gas at the rate of 15 mpg, to get him to his private jet, so he could make a $400-haircut appointment, so he could look all spiffy for dinner at his 28,000-square-foot adobe in North Carolina on 100 acres that’s now missing a few trees.

If you’ll excuse me, I need to head on over to my favorite car dealer to trade in my SUV for ANOTHER SUV.

(Pssst — in case you’re wondering, the “Nanocar” is the world’s smallest car — a single molecule that actually contains a chassis, axles and four buckyball wheels — whatever they might be. I hear it gets pretty good mileage. I’m serious. I looked it up.)

Gaylord Herald Times

http://www.gaylordheraldtimes.com/articles/2007/09/07/opinion/columns/doc46e19fc1ca3a2159671004.txt

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