Rather: Watch Edwards
Jan. 23, 2004
Kerry's Got The Mo'
Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., laughs during a town hall meeting in Portsmouth, N.H. Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2004. (Photo: AP)
Kerry is hot, but Edwards may be on fire.
Dan Rather
CBS News Anchor
The latest from CBS News reporters and analysts on the 2004 campaign:
Edwards the One to Watch?
By Dan Rather
What Ails Joe & The Gen.?
By Jarrett Murphy
Kerry's Military Advantage
By David Paul Kuhn
Defending Dean's Scream
By Dick Meyer
Dems Beat Up On Bush
By David Paul Kuhn
Clark: Paper Or Plastic?
By Jarrett Murphy
Anatomy Of A Caucus
By David Paul Kuhn
The Road From Iowa
By Dick Meyer
Why Kerry Won In Iowa
By Monika McDermott
Carter-Kennedy Redux
By Dotty Lynch
Wes Clark: Friend Of Bill
By Bonney Kapp
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More campaign news:
Washington Wrap
Daily Campaign Schedules
Primary And Caucus Calendar
CBS News Polls
Campaign 2004 Interactive
Campaign Roadblog
Video: 'The Kids On The Bus'
(CBS) CBS News Anchor Dan Rather took a break from anchoring the Evening News to do a little political punditry. And he sees a rise in N.C. Sen. John Edwards' political fortunes.
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The press herd has thundered toward Kerry. With good reason: New England regional favorite Senator John Kerry, from neighboring Massachusetts, roared into New Hampshire fueled by his hard-won, upset first-place showing in Iowa. The herd loves a frontrunner so, true to form, hoof beats abound around Kerry now.
By any objective analysis, Kerry is the candidate of the moment. He deserves to be. He earned it. But if you’re looking for the candidate of the next moment, you might want to keep your eyes on Senator John Edwards.
Edwards’ showing in Iowa was at least as impressive as Kerry’s; perhaps more so, when one considers that Edwards had less money, less organization, and came from further back in the polls.
Now, reports from various experienced political observers in widely separate sections of New Hampshire report that Edwards’s popularity seems to be growing. This has not, at least not yet, been reflected by any big jump in the polls. Stay tuned and watch closely, though, because an Edwards surge may soon materialize.
Retired General Wesley Clark was perceived as flat in the polls before the candidates’ joint appearance — called a “debate” — Thursday night. Given what is widely considered to have been Clark’s lackluster appearance in that event, his poll numbers could very well flatten out even more or suffer an outright drop.
Some independent observers think that whatever Clark might lose, Edwards could very well gain. And then there are the high number of “undecideds” still remaining in New Hampshire (17 percent as of Friday, comparable to numbers at a similar time before Iowa) — an ample reservoir of voters for a possible Edwards surge.
Certain features of Edwards’s campaign — his “likability” rating in polls, his emphasis on words such as “optimism,” “hope,” and “the future,” and his refusal to attack his fellow Democrats — are reminiscent of Ronald Reagan’s winning strategy.
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