Update from July 19, 2007
Thursday, July 19, 2007
Dear Friends,
An article in today’s
on-line version of Time Magazine really caught
my attention, and I feel compelled to share it
with you. It talks about Edwards’ recent
poverty tour, about the connection between
poverty and health care, and tangentially about
another ugly side to coal.
As always,
I’m eager to have your feedback, and regarding
the usual “Upcoming Events” section of this
update, you can now find it on the front page
of our website. Thanks!
Ed
Fallon
JOHN EDWARDS FIRES UP HIS
POPULISM
by Eric Pooley
After three
days on the road with John Edwards in some of
the poorest places in America, it's not only
the depth of human need that hits you, but the
layered and interlocking complexity of it — the
way a complete lack of health care, for
instance, can all by itself consign someone to
ignorance and joblessness. But you're also
struck by how so many of the people who have
been dealt these difficult hands manage to play
them with grace and fortitude. That may sound
trite to some ears, but it probably wouldn't to
anyone who has spent time with James
Lowe.
Lowe is 51 years old, a disabled
coal miner from the hollows of Eastern
Kentucky. He has never been one to get up in
front of a crowd. Until last year, he wouldn't
have been able to speak to the crowd even if he
wanted to. He was born with a severe cleft
palate; when he tried to talk he could not make
himself understood, so after a while he stopped
trying. He was one of 10 children, born to
parents too poor to pay for the treatment he
needed, and of course there was no insurance.
Embarrassed by his condition, Lowe dropped out
of school in fifth grade without learning to
read or write, and eventually followed his
father into the mines — and still couldn't
afford treatment. Twenty-three years ago he was
partially paralyzed in a mining accident and
could no longer perform manual labor. That
didn't leave him many options.
Lowe
lived a mute and by his own account diminished
life for five decades in all before he finally
got a break last year. He made it happen by
standing in line for 13 hours at the Wise
Country Fairgrounds in the mountains of
southwestern Virginia, where a nonprofit
volunteer group called the Rural Area Medical
Health Expedition once a year provides free
medical and dental treatment to all comers. For
thousands of men and women like Lowe who crowd
the health fair every year, it represents the
only medical care they ever receive. The
dentists couldn't help Lowe on the spot but got
him in to see someone who could, and now he has
a dental prosthesis that allows him to speak
pretty well. And so here he was on Wednesday
morning — back at the fairgrounds rung by
red-clay cliffs and sitting in front of the
national media beside former Senator John
Edwards and a group of health advocates, all
because he wanted to say thank you to the
people who had helped him. "We grew up hard,
had nothing," he said, slim as a stick, with
thick brown hair combed straight back from a
well-worn face that's anchored by a
salt-and-pepper goatee. "But what these people
done for me made me feel like a whole different
person."
Lowe seemed to be tolerating
rather than enjoying all the attention, and he
looked a bit startled when Edwards, kicking off
the third and final day of his eight-state
poverty tour, seized on his story and got angry
on his behalf. "We have to do something about
this! This is not okay!" the candidate said.
"How can we allow this to happen, that James
had to live 50 years without treatment? Are you
listening? This is America's problem. And let
me tell you, as long as I am alive and
breathing I'm going to do something about
it!"
Edwards told James Lowe's story at
every stop for the rest of the day, and not
only because it was a powerful way to mention
that the universal health care he proposes has
a guaranteed dental benefit. Edwards talked
about him because Lowe is the kind of person he
knew growing up in the Carolinas, and his story
made a powerful connection. This was the day
the Edwards poverty tour rolled into John
Edwards's own part of the country, and
surrounded by working people the candidate
caught fire on their behalf. "James told us how
grateful he was to be able to talk — something
he has spent almost all his life not being able
to do," Edwards said in Prestonburg, Kentucky
later that day, at the big rally that ended his
tour in the same place where Senator Robert F.
Kennedy finished his own poverty tour 40 years
ago. "Instead of being angry about it, James
was proud. He was strong. He showed the kind of
character that I think represents what America
is. These people, people like my father, people
like James Lowe, they're the people who built
America — not these people on Wall
Street."
Edwards' populism was heating
up — and threatening to boil over. Though he
had sometimes seemed distracted on this tour,
as if holding something back during so many
sessions with so many needy people, his passion
had been building since the night before in
Pittsburgh, as he weaved stories from the past
two days into his remarks and brought into
sharp focus the themes of his poverty tour:
That it is wrong for millions of Americans to
have no medical care. That it is wrong for
millions of Americans to work full time yet
live in poverty. And on Wednesday he began
linking the problems of the poor to the
economic anxieties of the middle class in a way
he had not often done over the previous two
days. It's a linkage he'll undoubtedly make
again and again as he builds his message in the
coming months and tries to reinvigorate his
campaign. "I've been asked by some of the
media, 'Senator, the two Americas you talk
about, is it the rich and the poor?' No. It's
not. The two Americas are the very rich and
everybody else."
If our politics are
entering a new populist phase, Edwards isn't
about to be left behind. On Wednesday in
Prestonburg, the same day Barack Obama was
delivering a speech on urban poverty, Edwards
went after the fat cats in his own income
bracket with real fervor. "We have the greatest
economic inequality we've had in America since
the great Depression," he said. "We're now made
up of a few rich people who are doing extremely
well and everybody else. Washington's response
has been 'Greed is good. Take care of the
lobbyists. Take care of the special interests.'
There's another two Americas that exist in this
country: there's one for the lobbyists, for the
special interests, for the powerful, for the
big multinational corporations and there's
another one for everybody else. Well I'm here
to say that their America is over!"
He
didn't spell out how he intended to shut down
the America of the influence peddlers, but
nobody really expected him to. It was a
satisfying moment for the hundreds of people in
the crowd, who shouted lustily as Edwards
thundered away. At a press conference after the
speech, Edwards was asked how he'll respond to
the inevitable accusations of class warfare. "I
would say that we have in fact two different
Americas," he replied. "It's a reality. I'm not
against people doing well. I'm a leading
example of someone who has done extremely well.
Elizabeth and I have everything you could ever
have. But the problem today is that the
opportunities are being denied. That's actually
why I'm running for president. If you call
wanting to give everybody a chance 'class
warfare,' then so be it. That's what I'm
for."
Whatever else happens to Edwards
this year, whatever his candidacy becomes, it
matters that he spent three days talking about
the problems of people like James Lowe. Maybe
Edwards succeeds in linking those problems to
the concerns of the middle class and ignites
his candidacy. And maybe he doesn't. Either
way, he did some good this week and won at
least one vote. "It means the world to me that
he come down here," said James Lowe. "He's
talking about helping working people? He's
listening to people like me? To me, that means
everything."
