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Blunt and Influential, Kerry's Wife Is an X Factor
NY Times ^ | 02.21.04 | David M. Halbfinger

Posted on 02/21/2004 12:48:02 PM PST by Cathryn Crawford

Atlanta, Feb. 21 — In December 2002, when Teresa Heinz Kerry's husband, Senator John Kerry, came home from his physical boasting about his low cholesterol, she stared at his screening results for prostate cancer and saw trouble where he had not.

"He didn't know anything," she recalled. "He knew zero, zilch."

But Ms. Heinz Kerry, a physician's daughter who peruses medical journals and toxicology articles and is intrigued by alternative medicine and Eastern philosophy, knew enough to have her husband's blood retested for C-reactive protein, a little-known indicator of potentially cancerous inflammation. Two days before Christmas, his doctor told Mr. Kerry that his wife's fears were well placed; he was in the very early stages of prostate cancer.

Ms. Heinz Kerry may well have saved her husband's life. Yet the episode underscores how, politically, she may be both an asset and a liability for the senator. While she is known as a highly intelligent and devoted spouse who looks after her husband, Ms. Heinz Kerry has a reputation as being offbeat if not a little odd, and even some Democratic strategists say that could complicate the Kerry campaign's efforts to make the Kerrys appealing to voters.

On the campaign trail, she speaks in jarringly frank terms about dealing with grief and loss; she talks openly about distinctly un-Western modes of healing, which can leave her audiences as mystified as they are impressed.

In a move that was reminiscent of how Hillary Rodham Clinton became a lightning rod for her husband, the Republican National Committee on Friday sent journalists an e-mail message quoting Ms. Heinz Kerry comparing her husband to a "good wine," adding, "You know, it takes time to mature, and then it gets really good and you can sip it."

Paul Costello, who was the press secretary for Kitty Dukakis when her husband, Michael, was the Democratic nominee, warned that Republicans might continue to make an issue of Ms. Heinz Kerry.

The campaign, Mr. Costello said, "is going to have a volume of negativity that's already accelerated, so one has to be very, very careful."

"The one thing a spouse can't do on the campaign trail is to be a distraction," he said, "because it will be used against you. But within that you can still show that you have character and personality."

Today, a year after surgery, Mr. Kerry tells audiences that he is cancer-free because he could afford the best medical care and because senators enjoy excellent health insurance. He seldom adds that his wife caught what all that good care might have missed.

In fact, to hear it from Kerry campaign officials, Ms. Heinz Kerry, 65, has been the senator's secret weapon. Though his aides mainly play down her influence, she, in fact, helps shape his policies and campaign strategy in ways large and small, a role that stands in sharp contrast to what America learned about her when she first stepped into the political limelight a year ago.

At the time, there were juicy details about her Botox treatments and her prenuptial agreement, her Chanel shoes and her cashmere scarves. There was frequent mention of her inherited millions and the ketchup-red-and-white Gulfstream II — the most visible legacy of her 25-year marriage to Senator John Heinz of Pennsylvania, who was killed in a plane crash in 1991.

But there is a more unusual and, her admirers say, more authentic side to Ms. Heinz Kerry's public persona that stands in sharp contrast to that of her husband.

Where Mr. Kerry, 60, is guarded and cautious, she is uninhibited, cursing in one of her five languages or musing aloud in accented English about why her husband of nearly nine years is so often called aloof. Where he appears stiff, she is spontaneous, dispensing unsolicited romantic advice to campaign workers and reporters. Where he can appear calculating, she comes across as guileless, trashing a profile of her in a major newspaper as a "dumb piece" by "a dumb person who wrote it."

That is why, surprisingly, more than a year into the campaign that she initially opposed, some Democrats express concerns that Ms. Heinz Kerry's forthrightness and spontaneity could come back to haunt her husband as her remarks are put under the microscope of a general-election campaign. Ms. Heinz Kerry acknowledges the concerns, but — though friends describe her as being wounded by harsh coverage in the past — insists she can stand up to the scrutiny.

"If I get hit, so I get hit," she said.

What an America accustomed to a demure Laura Bush, and still divided over Mrs. Clinton, will think of Ms. Heinz Kerry's strongly held and freely shared views is an open question.

"Iowans perceived it more as honesty — not trying to always be the cautious spouse," said John Norris, who ran the campaign there and coached Ms. Heinz Kerry on the stump. But, he said, "getting her to meld into a role in the campaign is going to take some getting used to."

Ms. Heinz Kerry, a naturalized United States citizen who is half Portuguese, defies easy categorization. She told a largely Hispanic crowd in Phoenix that conservative radio shows were making fun of her accessories. "They don't like this shawl, because it looks ethnic," she said. "I have news for them: I am ethnic. I'm Latin."

And lately, she gives the impression that she is watching her words.

"You want to write that, or you want to know?" she said, bristling when a reporter asked whom Ms. Heinz Kerry, a Republican until a year ago, voted for in the 1972 Nixon-McGovern race. (McGovern, she said, after a moment's hesitation.)

"That's nobody's business," she said when asked how often she had had Botox injections.

Yet she still manages to go in interviews where many politicians —— including Mr. Kerry — would fear to tread. She looks back critically on Mrs. Clinton's failed effort to revise the nation's health care system as first lady. "The thing is, if it goes wrong, as it did, it's a twofer — both he and she lost, and the issue lost," Ms. Heinz Kerry said.

She pronounces herself ardently pro-choice, despite being a Roman Catholic, but in the next breath denounces the blunt language of some abortion rights advocates. "I'm old-fashioned," she said. "So I wouldn't use the phraseology of some people that say, `No, my body, I do what I want!' I find that kind of crude terminology, period."

And she fluidly describes her husband's stance on the buildup to war in Iraq — easily doing what he struggled with for months — while in the process depicting Mr. Kerry's role as having been suckered by the Bush administration.

"We had a president who was going to war, period," Ms. Heinz Kerry said. "What these people on Senate Foreign Relations were trying to do, and got bombed by it, was — and I was close to that — how can you put the brakes on this guy when he can do what he wants?"

But then Ms. Heinz Kerry, who was born in Mozambique to European parents, has also consistently leavened her harsher opinions with a sugary serenade to America — its democracy, its can-do spirit — that might be laughed away as cornball if it were not delivered by a self-described "daughter of Africa" who grew up in a dictatorship.

In a way, Ms. Heinz Kerry's paeans to her adopted homeland are a corollary to her husband's talk of his Vietnam War record; both stake claims to patriotic turf that Republicans would most likely try to seize otherwise, said Gary C. Jacobson, a political science professor at the University of California at San Diego.

Ms. Heinz Kerry's contributions to the campaign go well beyond her schedule of appearances, which on many days exceeds her husband's. She swung through Atlanta this week, having lunch with Democrats and picking up endorsements. She played a role in the ouster of Mr. Kerry's campaign manager, Jim Jordan, after making known her displeasure with his failure to go on the air with advertisements last summer as Howard Dean took off in the polls. When she speaks to her husband, it is often to convey her observations from the trail, or feedback about his television performances.

"She can be direct with him like probably nobody else can," Mr. Norris said.

But Ms. Heinz Kerry says she avoids the conference calls and formal processes of the campaign. She also says she has no designs on a formal role in the White House.

"I don't pretend at all to write policy, nor do I want to," she said.

Yet to leave it there is to understate the influence Ms. Heinz Kerry already has had, and doubtless would continue to exert on her husband and his platform, through her management of the $1.2 billion philanthropic operation left to her by Mr. Heinz.

Mr. Kerry's health and education plans for infants and children mirror his wife's extensive work on early childhood education. Her foundation's pilot prescription-drug plan for the elderly was written into law in Massachusetts. And it was their shared work on the environment, after all, that brought them together in 1992, at a conference on global warming in Rio de Janeiro. The two, who married in 1995, are touchy-feely on the trail. When they traveled together in New Hampshire, he routinely stood by watching admiringly as she rambled on in a near whisper, her flowing hair hiding her eyes. "Isn't she spectacular?" Mr. Kerry would say.

Oddly, Ms. Heinz Kerry seems not to return the favor: when he is speaking his wife often wears a pained, or even bored, expression. She says it is merely the look she gets when she is thinking deeply. Or she pleads shyness, saying Mr. Kerry's growing crowds at times have overwhelmed her.

The role she plays most avidly in the campaign, though, is that of nursemaid to the candidate. She gave his aides a recipe for a grog — hot water, lemon, fresh ginger, and honey, but no whisky — that Mr. Kerry downed nightly in Iowa. She pushes him to eat protein and skip the pasta.

"I love medicine," said Ms. Heinz Kerry. Her father wanted her to go to medical school, but "the only woman doctor I knew who had a child was divorced," she said. "I wanted to have children, be a mother, be a wife, and I felt there was no room to be a doctor." She has three grown sons from her marriage to Senator Heinz, and Mr. Kerry has two daughters from his previous marriage.

Her ideas about healing range far afield of Western science. She talks to bewildered audiences about tai chi, about "embracing the tiger" — a metaphor for dealing with loss or grief by confronting and accepting it. She quotes a "monk" — who turns out to be a meditation student she met at a spa — who urged her to "cry to Shiva, hold it, and then let it go."

But the way Ms. Heinz Kerry views herself and her husband may resonate with many people.

Asked why he is often called aloof, she asked, "Do you mean shy? Snobby? Distant? Cut off from people? Arrogant?" And she compared him to her own mother: both were sent to boarding schools at a young age.

"My mom never got over it," she continued, referring to the separation from family and friends. "I think John probably missed some of that. Because when you see him with Vietnam veterans, people who've been where he has, he's completely different. So I think it's just a cloak of protection.

"I think maybe, if John had been married to me earlier," she said, "he might've gotten over some of those needs and hurt."


TOPICS: Editorial; Extended News; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004; issues; kerry; prostatecancer; teresaheinz
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To: Hon; Neets
Did you say United for Peace and Justice?
Jan. 18, Saturday, 11:00 am The scenario plan for Washington DC includes an opening rally on the West side of the Capitol Building (on the National Mall, at 3rd St. and Constitution Ave. NW). This rally will include representatives from the diverse movements and organizations that oppose the war. Following the rally, we will hold a mass march to the Washington Navy Yard -- a massive military installation located in a working class neighborhood in Southeast Washington DC that parks warships on the Anacostia River. Speakers include: Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney; Bishop Thomas Gumbleton, Auxiliary Bishop, Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit; Ramsey Clark, former U.S. attorney general; Mike Farrell, actor. For more information on the January 18 National March on Washington DC Jan. 18-19, see: http://www.internationalanswer.org
Source- United for Peace and Justice website
21 posted on 02/21/2004 1:32:35 PM PST by William McKinley
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To: kabar
she stared at his screening results for prostate cancer and saw trouble where he had not.... Ms. Heinz Kerry may well have saved her husband's life.

Does that mean that the Doctor failed to notice the problem or that the Kerrys' do their own analysis. A bit dramatic, don't you think?

+++++

Come on! His doctors probably don't even speak French!
22 posted on 02/21/2004 1:32:57 PM PST by Hon
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To: William McKinley
You are too quick!!! I just now found that.....SHEESH.
23 posted on 02/21/2004 1:33:31 PM PST by Neets (Complainers change their complaints, but they never reduce the amount of time spent in complaining.~)
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To: Cathryn Crawford
Sounds to me like the whole nationalized medicine thing is a boondoggle. And that the medical miracle that saved Kerry's life came from those "distinctly un-Western modes of healing" which are not supported by government programs.

Can we please get Mrs. Kerry out on the stump more?

24 posted on 02/21/2004 1:35:29 PM PST by William McKinley
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To: Neets
:p

Beat you to it!

25 posted on 02/21/2004 1:36:07 PM PST by William McKinley
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To: William McKinley
They're quite a bunch, aren't they? Here are a couple more images from them--funded by Her Heinzess:


26 posted on 02/21/2004 1:36:19 PM PST by Hon
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To: Hon
You get Madness, they say?

We can't have that! Better vote for the Botox Bunch!

27 posted on 02/21/2004 1:38:25 PM PST by William McKinley
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To: Hon
United for Peace and Justice is the succesor group to International ANSWER, formed after too many people found out that ANSWER was communist.
Teresa also had an influential board member on her foundation's board for 10 years...Ken Lay.
28 posted on 02/21/2004 1:42:55 PM PST by tinamina
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To: DC native
Did she marry him, or adopt him?

I thought she bought him.

29 posted on 02/21/2004 1:45:40 PM PST by pgkdan
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To: William McKinley; Hon
I prefer to call them the "BoTOXIC" bunch....toxic in more ways than one.
30 posted on 02/21/2004 1:46:05 PM PST by Neets (Complainers change their complaints, but they never reduce the amount of time spent in complaining.~)
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To: Cathryn Crawford
who was born in Mozambique to European parents,

Is this a polite way to say she is a honkie?

31 posted on 02/21/2004 1:46:25 PM PST by Flint
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To: DC native
Did she marry him, or adopt him?

The ultimate gigolo experience.

He married money.......

She got a pet.

32 posted on 02/21/2004 1:49:29 PM PST by CROSSHIGHWAYMAN (I don't believe anything a Democrat says. Bill Clinton set the standard!)
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To: CROSSHIGHWAYMAN
He married money....... She got a pet.

Vote for me!

I'm French and I served in Vietnam!

33 posted on 02/21/2004 1:52:59 PM PST by mountaineer
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To: Jeff Chandler
Edwards is a pushover. Kerry is just a more interesting pushover.
34 posted on 02/21/2004 1:54:13 PM PST by BobS
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To: kabar
she stared at his screening results for prostate cancer and saw trouble where he had not.... Ms. Heinz Kerry may well have saved her husband's life.

Kerry is in remission from Prostrate Cancer?? That would disqualify him in my book even if he was a Pubbie.
35 posted on 02/21/2004 2:38:30 PM PST by mlmr (Everything is getting better and better!)
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To: All
But then Ms. Heinz Kerry, who was born in Mozambique to European parents, has also consistently leavened her harsher opinions with a sugary serenade to America — its democracy, its can-do spirit — that might be laughed away as cornball if it were not delivered by a self-described "daughter of Africa" who grew up in a dictatorship.

Geez, it seems that's one of the few decent things about this woman, but of course, that's what the Times denigrates as "cornball" and "sugary". Then they wonder why we think the Times hates America!

36 posted on 02/21/2004 2:42:37 PM PST by NYCVirago
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To: Flint
Maybe they were afraid to say Portuguese?
37 posted on 02/21/2004 2:44:11 PM PST by nopardons
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To: mlmr
Why? His prostate was removed .

What I want to know, is why his doctor didn't pick up on the reading and it took Kerry's wife to see it. What kind of a lousy doctor is Kerry going to ?

38 posted on 02/21/2004 2:46:36 PM PST by nopardons
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To: All
Oddly, Ms. Heinz Kerry seems not to return the favor: when he is speaking his wife often wears a pained, or even bored, expression.

Can't say I blame her for that!

39 posted on 02/21/2004 2:46:49 PM PST by NYCVirago
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To: mlmr
It would appear that Teresa [teh-REHZ-ah] can speak Portuguese, Afrikaans, English, French, and Spanish.

It would appear that Mrs Edwards has lost beaucoup
weight, she was a very large woman indeed just a few
years ago.
40 posted on 02/21/2004 2:47:39 PM PST by Chris Talk (What Earth now is, Mars once was. What Mars now is, Earth will become.)
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