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John Edwards opens up about son he lost
AP/Yahoo ^ | 3/29/07 | Nedra Pickler

Posted on 03/29/2007 11:48:37 AM PDT by Qwertrew

WASHINGTON - As he tries to explain how he'll cope with the return of his wife's cancer, presidential hopeful John Edwards is opening up about another family struggle — the death of his teenage son Wade 11 years ago.

His family life suddenly in the spotlight, Edwards has responded by speaking about an experience bound to bring him sympathy, humanize his campaign and focus on perseverance after tragedy.

The discussion began last Thursday when John and Elizabeth Edwards announced her breast cancer had spread to her bone. It continued Saturday when Edwards was asked if he could balance the campaign and her diagnosis.

"This is not the first challenge like this Elizabeth and I have been through," Edwards said at a candidate forum in Las Vegas. "As many of you know, we lost our son about 10, actually about 11 years ago now — in 1996."

Wade Edwards was 16 when he died, on the way to the family beach home in their home state of North Carolina, when a gust of wind swept his Jeep off the highway.

Wade's name is spoken frequently in the Edwards household, those close to them say, alive in the memories of his parents and sister and even well-known by two siblings born after his death. But Edwards had been hesitant to bring his oldest son into his political life, even though by many accounts Wade inspired his father to run for office.

Edwards wore his son's Outward Bound pin on his suit jacket in silent tribute throughout the 2004 campaign. He sometimes wears the pin on the 2008 trail.

The Edwardses didn't want his son to be remembered for his death, but his life, those close to them say. They started a foundation in Wade's name to support causes important to him, such as scholarships and a computer lab where students can get after-school help.

A person close to the Edwardses, who did not want to be quoted talking about their family decisions, said they are talking more openly about their experience with Wade's death because they believe it helps answer legitimate questions about how they will cope with Mrs. Edwards' cancer.

When asked during last Thursday's news conference how they could stay focused on the campaign — and perhaps eventually with running the country — Mrs. Edwards cited her husband's work on the Wade Edwards Foundation.

"He has an unbelievable toughness, a reserve that allows him to push forward with what needs to happen," she said. "It's what happened after our son died in 1996."

Edwards was asked in an interview broadcast Sunday on CBS' "60 Minutes" why he and his wife want to go through a presidential campaign when she has a finite period of time left.

"We all have a finite period of time, and the idea that we know what that finite period is, is a fantasy to begin with," Edwards responded. "As we learned in 1996, with our son, we don't know what's going to happen."

The cruel tragedy of Wade's death changed everything for the Edwardses. Mrs. Edwards quit her job as an attorney, their daughter Cate canceled her plans to attend boarding school and a year later John Edwards began campaigning for the Senate.

He declined to talk much about Wade in that race and in his first White House run. His most extensive revelations about Wade during the 2004 presidential race came in his book, "Four Trials," in which he described the loss as "the undercurrent of my life."

"Nothing in my life has ever hit me and stripped everything away like my son's death," Edwards wrote. "That moment, those days, belong to our family."

Just weeks before Wade died, the teen was honored at the White House by then-first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, now Edwards' chief rival for the Democratic nomination, for an essay he wrote about going into the ballot box with his father as a young boy.

Other presidential candidates have openly talked about their tragedies on the campaign trail. Former Vice President Al Gore discussed his sister's death from cancer, and former House Democratic Leader Dick Gephardt, promoting his health care plan, spoke about his son's successful cancer treatment.

"Some people like to say that their private life is separate, but I think that's a myth," said Erik Smith, a top adviser on Gephardt's 2004 campaign. "The reality is that if you are running for president, your life isn't private any more.

"Personal stories and personal anecdotes help them overcome voter cynicism," Smith said. "A lot of time people assume the worst about politicians and assume their positions come from polling, and particularly on presidential campaigns, it's important for people to understand that those policies come from a personal place."

Democrat Joe Biden, another candidate in the 2008 race, has also experienced tragedy. He lost his wife and infant daughter in a car accident shortly after his first election to the Senate in 1972. In 1988, he was hospitalized for months after suffering two brain aneurysms.

Biden sometimes talks about the experiences, particularly in discussions of health care. Recently in an appearance before the nation's largest firefighters union, he expressed gratitude for firefighters who saved his two sons who were also injured in the car crash but recovered. He said firefighters also drove him to a neurosurgeon in a snowstorm for the operation that saved his life.

"We owe you big," he said. "You literally saved the lives of three Bidens."

Donna Brazile, Gore's campaign manager, said family narratives can give more meaning to a candidate's reason for running, but the discussion must be balanced so the candidate is not seen as exploiting tragedy.

"I think the Edwards are bringing in Wade to say, 'We've faced tragedy and we've overcome and we will overcome again,'" Brazile said.

Mrs. Edwards was always more open about discussing Wade, although also careful not to be seen as using his memory for political gain in the 2004 campaign. She wrote more about her grief in an autobiography that came out last year, "Saving Graces."

Asked about how much it drives his life in an interview on MSNBC's "Hardball" in December, Edwards responded that "it makes you think about what you are doing and makes you probably more interested in serving."

"When I die, I want to feel like Wade's death and his life helped me realize this," he said. "I want to feel like I've done everything I can to serve, whatever that turns out to be."

___

Associated Press Holly Ramer in Concord, N.H., contributed to this report.


TOPICS: Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: exploitation; pitypart; sickening
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To: no dems

He needs to stop talking...this is going to backfire on him.


41 posted on 03/29/2007 12:22:03 PM PDT by Qwertrew (If you're new to the internet, CLICK HERE.)
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To: Qwertrew
When I was in high school, we had this one poor kid who was just a schlub. He was pathetic. He looked goofy, he was a geek, and tragic stuff was constantly happening to him.

He got laid all the time. He always got "sympathy sex".

Even from smart, pretty girls who should have known better, and probably hated themselves afterward (`cause he always bragged about them).

I can't tell you how many of them, when we asked them why they let him do it, said "I just felt so sorry for him".

That's what John Edward's electoral legacy will become.

The really slimy "lawyerly" thing is that of course, it's all calculated.
42 posted on 03/29/2007 12:27:35 PM PDT by conservativeharleyguy (Technically, we're all Republicans.)
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To: Qwertrew
"I want to feel like I've done everything I can to serve, whatever that turns out to be." ---John Edwards

This sleazy little shyster spent years suing obstetricians and hospitals using junk science--later disproved--to convince juries that failure to perform cesarean sections on delivering women caused cerebral palsy in their babies. Edwards amassed more than $100 million as a personal injury lawyer.

As Ann Coulter writes in GODLESS:

"As a result of such lawsuits, there are now more than four times as many cesarean sections as there were in in 1970. But curiously, there has been no reduction in babies born with cerebral palsy. All those cesareans have, however, increased the mother's risk of death, hemorrhage, infection, pulmonary embolism, and Mendelson's syndrome, while also driving up the cost of medical care. . .those "little guys" John Edwards claimed to represent are having a lot more trouble finding doctors to deliver babies. Insurance companies are getting out of the medical malpractice business and doctors are getting out of the obstetrics business. . ."
43 posted on 03/29/2007 12:27:37 PM PDT by Brad from Tennessee (")
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To: Kryptonite
...a bedroom...

for the hired help, no doubt.

44 posted on 03/29/2007 12:28:42 PM PDT by nfldgirl
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To: Lee'sGhost
Really? I didn't know that. How old was he?

It was a daughter "Pauline" She was three and she died of leukemia.

45 posted on 03/29/2007 12:29:12 PM PDT by bad company (I'd give my right arm to be ambidextrous)
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To: Qwertrew

Another Edwards pity party for votes. Gag!

Join all other Americans, Mr Edwards, those who you certainly show no pity for.


46 posted on 03/29/2007 12:29:35 PM PDT by dforest (Fighting the new liberal Conservatism. The Left foot in the GOP door.)
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To: Qwertrew

How does he know a gust of wind blew him off the road?


47 posted on 03/29/2007 12:30:01 PM PDT by DainBramage
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To: Qwertrew

Hmmm, no mention of how the Edward's eventually handled the loss of their son.

How that once the 'perfect' family of Mom, Dad, Sis and Bro was destroyed, John decided to start over.

Sis was sent away to school, Mom was sent to the fertility clinics where she eventually was able to replace the older siblings with two younger, more photogenic kids.

I've not heard anyone speculate on whether the fertility treatments involving high doses of hormones may have precipitated the cancer.


48 posted on 03/29/2007 12:36:32 PM PDT by TC Rider (The United States Constitution ? 1791. All Rights Reserved.)
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To: bad company; Lee'sGhost

Her name was Pauline Robinson Bush, but she was called Robin..her death led Barbara Bush to become involved in working with the Leukemia Society for many years...


49 posted on 03/29/2007 12:41:56 PM PDT by andysandmikesmom
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To: Qwertrew

Here we go again. Democrat pity party.


50 posted on 03/29/2007 12:44:33 PM PDT by Fiddlstix (Warning! This Is A Subliminal Tagline! Read it at your own risk!(Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: theDentist

Did he pull the Clinton Lip Quiver(CLQ), [pat. pend.]?


51 posted on 03/29/2007 12:46:14 PM PDT by PzLdr ("The Emperor is not as forgiving as I am" - Darth Vader)
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To: Qwertrew

I wouldn't vote for Edwards in a million years but after seeing him and his wife on 60 minutes (why do I watch that show? I don't know) I felt that they were honest and real on this one issue. Especially her but even him.

I feel that I can despise him for the trial lawyer parasite, demagogue, false populist, clinton hack that he is, but not belittle him or his wife for their decision on what is, in the end, an intensely personal matter.


52 posted on 03/29/2007 12:48:43 PM PDT by 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten
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To: AU72

He is doing just that, but he doesn't stand a chance of winning the White House, thankfully.


53 posted on 03/29/2007 12:51:44 PM PDT by pleikumud
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To: Brad from Tennessee
So in order to serve, his immediate thought was to become president of the United States. To hell with wasting time serving his community raising funds for say cancer or even being involved in parents groups focused on keeping our children safe. No Mr. Edwards with his ambulance chasing background thinks he's qualified to run the free world.
54 posted on 03/29/2007 12:56:39 PM PDT by mimaw
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To: Lee'sGhost

I think that not a lot of people know about his lost daughter and is evidence that the Bush family views service to country in an entire different light that someone like Edwards.

Bush 41 would not brag about his military service as a pilot in WWII or let others do so either during his failed re-election campaign against a draft dodger. Drove me nuts at times. It was just not his character to exploit things for political traction where others had died.

OR think of Kerry constantly going on about being a vietnam vet, totally exploiting it for every single iota he could squeeze out of it.



55 posted on 03/29/2007 12:59:36 PM PDT by Names Ash Housewares
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To: Fiddlstix

Gosh Elizabeth's cancer gained me traction let's see what my dead son will do! Shameless Libs!


56 posted on 03/29/2007 1:01:58 PM PDT by LYSandra
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To: Qwertrew

This ambulance chasing pig should stop using his family for political purposes. Frankly, it's disgusting. You're not pushing a bleeding heart jury to give you a big injury award, you jerk.


57 posted on 03/29/2007 1:05:01 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Qwertrew

Edwards is desperate. He knows that he will lose, but wants to get the wussy-face women's mags to start with the teary-eyed sympathy thing.
No sympathy for a cutthroat "trial" (suing) lawyer.


58 posted on 03/29/2007 1:06:07 PM PDT by Leftism is Mentally Deranged
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To: Qwertrew
Next up on the campaign trail......

.....the Breck Girl will share with us how he lost a puppy when he was a child.

59 posted on 03/29/2007 1:09:09 PM PDT by Lizavetta
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To: DainBramage

I was wondering that myself. Assuming that is what happened, was he driving in a hurricane? How hard does the wind have to be blowing before a vehicle can be compromised? What factors are involved? I honestly don't know.


60 posted on 03/29/2007 1:14:17 PM PDT by synbad600
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