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Andrew Sullivan: Skywalker Edwards v Darth Vader Cheney
The Sunday Times ^ | July 11, 2004 | Andrew Sullivan

Posted on 07/10/2004 4:29:53 PM PDT by MadIvan

As soon as John Kerry announced his choice of John Edwards as his running mate last week, the contrast was unavoidable. This autumn, Edwards, a telegenic, bubbly lawyer who looks 40, will go up against Big Daddy Cheney, the bald, dour, snarling vice-president whose most recent public pronouncement was to tell a leading Democratic senator to “go f*** yourself”.

Edwards is a Southerner from a modest background, but he is also a member of the new class — a multi-millionaire trial lawyer with a fiercely independent career woman for a wife. Cheney is from Wyoming, one of the most beautiful of American heartland states. He is a man who laid railway tracks in his youth and made a name for himself in politics as defender of conservative values and defence hawkishness. He married his high school sweetheart.

And last week the cultural contrasts were even more pronounced. The scenes of the two Democratic candidates in the rolling hills of Pennsylvania were picture perfect. Small children added to the JFK tableau. The rhetoric was warm, populist and broad-grinned. Kerry and Edwards were very touchy-feely, clasping each other, always close, almost the definition of the “new men” of the boomer era. You simply couldn’t imagine Bush and Cheney having such a physical rapport.

When asked what he thought of the John Edwards pick last week, President Bush replied tartly: “Dick Cheney can be president.” That kind of gruff, no-nonsense language couldn’t be more distant from the blathery uplift heard from Kerry in his announcement speech. But beneath the cultural surface there is also a simple truth about these two vice-presidential candidates. They represent the bases of their respective parties.

In a polity that is as polarised as ever, the Republicans and the Democrats have become far more insular. The people who make it to the top are no longer those that can forge compromises but those who can rally the faithful.

This is what Edwards represents. He is an extremely liberal senator, even though he is from the South. Congressional score cards put his voting record as the fourth most left-wing senator in the latest session (Kerry is the most left-wing of any in the Democratic caucus). The Republicans swiftly put out an attack sheet on Edwards’s legislative past and, for all its partisan edge, it makes for interesting reading.

He voted to keep the abortion of late-term babies legal and he’s an avowed trade protectionist, opposing Nafta and almost every other free-trade accord. He has voted against every tax cut Bush has proposed. But he voted in favour of the Patriot Act, which grants authorities greater police power to curtail civil liberties in the war on terror, and he voted in favour of war against Saddam, although, like Kerry, he voted against the $87 billion (about £47 billion) required to finance the liberation.

Just as important, Edwards also represents a critical Democratic fundraising constituency — trial lawyers. They sue corporations or governments mainly for personal injuries that affect individuals.

If you are as smart and as rhetorically gifted as Edwards, you can win millions in damages — and take a huge proportion in fees. This, of course, ratchets up the price of malpractice insurance for a whole swathe of industries, especially healthcare, and has contributed to higher prices for a range of goods and services.

Business groups want to change this system, and Republicans generally favour tort reform. So the trial lawyers have become a very influential group financing the Democratic party’s campaign. A huge proportion of Edwards’s campaign money comes from the trial lawyers. And they have helped make the Kerry campaign the best financed challenge in US history. Edwards is a sop to that constituency. He is one of them.

Now take a look at Dick Cheney’s old congressional record. He was the sole representative from Wyoming for several years in the 1980s and his voting record was easily one of the most arch-conservative in Congress. He voted against sanctions on South Africa and Aids research. He voted against every measure to control gun sales. He also opposed a bill to let government employees donate their holidays or sick leave to other workers with an illness or family emergency. There wasn’t a defence programme he didn’t like or a tax cut he didn’t vote for.

True, he is not a born-again Christian — Bush nails down that part of the coalition. Instead, Cheney is the old-style, tough-as-nails conservative.

So in Cheney and Edwards you have in some ways a microcosm of how divided and polarised America now is. To be sure, they do have some rounded edges.

Cheney was always a federalist and has a libertarian, western streak in him. In the 2000 campaign he opposed the idea of a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage, arguing that the states should retain the ability to decide for themselves. His daughter Mary is openly lesbian and a critical member of his campaign staff.

Equally, with Edwards there are few signs that he shares the gut hostility to American power now endemic on the left. His populist pitch — about reuniting the “two Americas” of the haves and have-nots — is not a bitter tirade. It’s a unifying and uplifting message of the Clintonian variety.

His vote for war against Saddam completes the astonishing conclusion of the Democrats’ primary season: their Iraq policy is now identical to the president’s. And in the polls, Edwards does well with independents and Republicans — far better than Kerry. It’s hard not to like him.

With Cheney, alas, the opposite has become the case. Over the past few years he has almost delighted in keeping out of sight, in cultivating a Dr Evil persona and lashing out at opponents. During the Abu Ghraib catastrophe, Cheney’s instinct was not to apologise or rethink, but to tell reporters, with respect to Donald Rumsfeld, to “get off his case”.

It would be safe to say that he has persuaded almost nobody in three years to vote Republican who wasn’t already signed up. In a recent survey, he registered an alarmingly low 22% favourability rating, with 31% viewing him unfavourably. That is triple what it was two years ago.

Why not dump him? I’ve long hoped Bush would replace him with Condi Rice — a cultural and political coup that could transform the race. But Bush won’t. He never fires anyone. And, for most of the campaign, the Cheney-Edwards comparison won’t matter much anyway. Americans vote for presidents, not vice-presidents.

The first polls after the Edwards announcement showed only a modest bounce for Kerry, suggesting that in this deeply polarised electorate, big shifts are unlikely. But both Edwards and Cheney will be directed to firing up their respective bases and attacking the opposition. In this Cheney, oddly enough, may have an advantage. He is good at attacking, while Edwards has built his career on a positive message.

The same paradox may well be true about their scheduled debate. Edwards is perhaps the best orator from his party for many years. Expect him to raise the roof at the Democrats’ convention in Boston.

Cheney is terrible on the stump. He doesn’t even like applause. At a recent speech, when cheers forced him to repeat a sentence, he growled: “You guys want to hear this speech or not?” Edwards, by comparison, targets every member of the audience with charm and persuasion, just as he did so brilliantly with dozens of juries.

And just because it’s a sideshow don’t imagine that it won’t be drama. Think Luke Skywalker versus Darth Vader and the boyish charms of the 1990s versus the cold fear of the new millennium. It will be not so much a vote as a taking of the American temperature.


TOPICS: Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: North Carolina; US: Wyoming; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 2004election; cheney; darthvader; dickcheney; edwards; election2004; hyhabeas; johnedwards; johnkerry; lordvader; massachusetts
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To: giotto

Good casting.


41 posted on 07/10/2004 7:43:30 PM PDT by altura
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To: MadIvan
Now take a look at Dick Cheney’s old congressional record. He was the sole representative from Wyoming for several years in the 1980s and his voting record was easily one of the most arch-conservative in Congress. He voted against sanctions on South Africa and Aids research. He voted against every measure to control gun sales. He also opposed a bill to let government employees donate their holidays or sick leave to other workers with an illness or family emergency. There wasn’t a defence programme he didn’t like or a tax cut he didn’t vote for.

What's not to like? He forgot to mention that Lynn Cheney is both pretty and devoutly conservative.

42 posted on 07/10/2004 7:50:04 PM PDT by Senator_Blutarski (No good deed goes unpunished.)
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To: Cincinna

>>Cheney was always a federalist and has a libertarian, western streak in him.<<

I just don't get the libertarian/federalist connection!

DK


43 posted on 07/10/2004 7:59:15 PM PDT by Dark Knight
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To: MadIvan

Sulivan has gone to the dark side since Bush has openly stated he would support FMA.

The homosexual sulivan cares about nothing but his recreational sex.


44 posted on 07/10/2004 9:18:44 PM PDT by longtermmemmory (VOTE!)
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To: surrey
There is no way Edwards will have a grasp of world affairs, or anything else for that matter, the way Cheney will.

Exactly my thoughts. Edwards may be a glib speaker but he won't have near the knowledge to pull info out of the air like Cheney does.

Edwards is all frosting and no cake, and will like melt into a greasy ooze under the debate lights.

45 posted on 07/10/2004 9:25:50 PM PDT by Tamzee (Flush the Johns before they flood the White House!)
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To: Luke
I haven't seen too many Southern men wearing $2500 custom made suits and shirts. Edwards isn't even in touch with his one constituents.

And how can a guy choose a running mate he really doesn't like, but rather chooses one that will get the most votes? But then, I guess that's Kerry's MO.....the way he relates to the "wife" leads me to believe his motivation is strictly me, me, me.

And one last thing! How long has Tereza been in the USA? Can't she drop the droll accent, I'm not impressed!
46 posted on 07/10/2004 9:39:36 PM PDT by not2worry
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To: Tamsey

The debates aren't actual debates, they're for the most part scripted soundbites. Neither Bush, Kerry, Cheney, nor Edwards will make mincemeat of his opponent. Unless one of the candidates has a complete meltdown on camera, which I don't anticipate happening, nobody's mind is going to be changed.

Supporters of one candidate will think he won. Vice versa for supporters of the other candidate, and the polls will continue within a few points of each other all the way to election day.


47 posted on 07/10/2004 9:40:09 PM PDT by kms61
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To: surrey

I'm with you 100%. I don't know where people get this cockamamie notion that Pretty Boy is going to have VP Cheney on the rehetorical ropes during a debate. In the 2000 campaign, every time I heard Cheney give an interview, he absolutely commanded attention and respect with his knowledge of the facts, his reason, his logic, his precision, and that tough-as-nails, cool and confident tone of voice.

Edwards is toast.


48 posted on 07/10/2004 9:54:43 PM PDT by Choose Ye This Day (We're all DOOOOOOOOMED!!! < /DNC talking points>)
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To: MadIvan
I see Chaney as John Wayne vs city slicker Edwards. I watched Edwards on TV today doing the speechifying thing and he didn't know when to stop. Kerry was watching his performance like a proud daddy. The VP debate should be quite a crowd pleaser. Chaney will talk intelligently to the audience and Edwards will perform for the jury. Let the games begin.
49 posted on 07/10/2004 10:09:01 PM PDT by dasein64 (America the beautiful-----Land of the free and home of the brave)
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To: MadIvan

bttt


50 posted on 07/11/2004 12:11:55 AM PDT by lainde (Heads up...We're coming and we've got tongue blades!!)
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To: MadIvan

That remains one of the most beautiful pictures of Vader, or any movie character. The only other one that compares is Vader in the Carbonite Chamber with the orange light and gas wreathing his massive frame in ESB.


51 posted on 07/11/2004 12:16:53 AM PDT by Skywalk (Transdimensional Jihad!)
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To: MadIvan

yeah, but which part of his body is doing the thinking for him...

All that John-John hugging is to nail down a particular constituency?!?


52 posted on 07/11/2004 1:37:25 AM PDT by WOSG (Peace through Victory! Iraq victory, W victory, American victory!)
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To: tophat9000

Thanks for the laugh. Darth was my favorite character. :-) And Obi Wan.


53 posted on 07/11/2004 1:38:38 AM PDT by bootless (Never Forget - And Never Again)
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To: MadIvan

index


54 posted on 07/11/2004 1:48:53 AM PDT by smonk
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To: Redcoat LI
Does this mean Dick Cheney is John Edwards's father? - LOL!
55 posted on 07/11/2004 4:49:41 AM PDT by Free_at_last_-2001 (is clinton in jail yet?)
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To: MadIvan
Cheney, the bald, dour, snarling vice-president whose most recent public pronouncement was to tell a leading Democratic senator to “go f*** yourself”.

He's bald, true, but not dour, and he only snarls at those who need to be snarled at. And he most certainly did NOT publicly tell anyone to, ahem, go entertain himself. The comment to Leahy was a private one.

56 posted on 07/11/2004 8:33:52 AM PDT by alnick
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To: somemoreequalthanothers
That is why they keep propogating this notion that he is a negative for Bush and should be dropped from the ticket. They have been pushing that crap almost from the beginning.

I heard yesterday that Cheney said that not only will he be on the ticket this year, he will finish out his term.

57 posted on 07/11/2004 8:36:09 AM PDT by alnick
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To: somemoreequalthanothers

I agree -- Sullivan must not have listened to his eulogy at the state funeral for Reagan- it was VERY personal and not at all darth-like. The Leahy incident I am sure is not the only time the Fbomb has been dropped in our Congress, it just so happens to be reported when it's Cheney. Cheney is not a limelight speaker and he's not a firecracker so everyone assumes he's nefarious. It's ridiculous- he is a fantastic speaker and very intelligent.


58 posted on 07/11/2004 8:37:51 AM PDT by lawgirl (is RNC bound! W here I come!)
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To: MadIvan
This autumn, Edwards, a telegenic, bubbly lawyer who looks 40, will go up against Big Daddy Cheney, the bald, dour, snarling vice-president whose most recent public pronouncement was to tell a leading Democratic senator to “go f*** yourself”.

Why do I get the idea that Sullivan has problems with father figures? Sullivan is harming himself with this public fawning over Edwards. How many heterosexuals are comfortable reading or listening to it?

59 posted on 07/11/2004 8:42:19 AM PDT by independentmind
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To: MadIvan
he growled: “You guys want to hear this speech or not?”

I'm guessing this was said jokingly as Cheney has a great sense of humor.

60 posted on 07/11/2004 8:56:03 AM PDT by Benrand
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