News atch Election 2004 Up And Coming Edwards doesn't cultivate Jews, but his views win Jewish support. MATTHEW E. BERGER Jewish Telegraphic Agency Portsmouth, N.H. en. John Edwards may not have recognized the Hebrew aleph stitched onto James Dricker's cap, but he understood what was written in his heart. Dricker, 55, the education director at Temple Israel in Portsmouth, N.H., was impressed with Edwards' sincerity after speaking with the North Carolina sena- tor about health care, education and the environment. "I don't vote Jewish," Dricker said after the get-together days before Christmas at the Friendly Toast restaurant. "I vote based on common sense and what is best for the country and ultimately for me." Edwards is an exception in a presiden- tial campaign marked by loud dedara- tions of Jewish affinity. He has warm ties with Jews in his state, but he hasn't made an issue of it. Edwards was a highly successful trial lawyer in North Carolina seven years ago when he sought a seat in the U.S. Senate and largely was able to self-finance his campaign. That meant Edwards didn't spend as much time as other aspiring lawmakers courting support and dollars in the Jewish community, both in and out of his state. Edwards has a solid record on Israel and emphasizes the issues that resonate with Jewish voters like Dricker: health, education and poverty. Edwards' experi- ence growing up poor in the South helped mold an outlook that makes him attractive to groups that see themselves as outsiders scrambling to get in. "I feel such a personal responsibility when it comes to issues of civil rights and race," he said. In his stump speech, Edwards says the color of one's skin or any other circum- stances of birth "should never control your destiny." "I'll never forget when I was in the sixth grade — I was living in Georgia at the time. My sixth-grade teache?walked into the classroom at the end of the day and said he wouldn't be teaching next , year because they were about to integrate the schools, and he wouldn't teach in an integrated school." Born in South Carolina on June 10, 1953, Edwards spent most of his child- S Jig 1/30 2004 26 hood in North Carolina. He was the first in his family to go to college, graduating from North Carolina State University in 1974. He received a law degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1977. Ken Broun, a former dean of UNC's law school, said, "He was, as I had been told, one of the" best trial lawyers I had ever seen." Broun served as a private judge for an Edwards case in the early 1990s. "He was an enormously persuasive lawyer who did a very good job for his client." Edwards' specialty was personal-injury cases involving children. He won a record-setting verdict for Valerie Lakey, a girl who was severely injured by a faulty swimming pool drain in 1993. Son's Death Edwards was apolitical, friends and col- leagues said. "If somebody had told me John Edwards was going to run for polit- ical office, I wouldn't have believed them," said Fred Baron, co-finance chair- man of Edwards' campaign and former president of the Association of Trial Lawyers of America. The death of Edwards' eldest son, Wade, at age 16 in a 19 . 96 car accident, changed Edwards' life. "When John walked out of the church for Wade's funeral, all he said was, 'Something good has got to come from this,'" Baron said. "You saw a transformation." Edwards withdrew completely for six months, friends said, and walked away from his law practice. "He decided at that point that he wanted to do some- thing other than the strict practice of law," Broun said. Edwards wanted a larger mission, and chose to challenge incumbent Sen. Lauch Fairdoth, a Republican. "When he decided to run for political office, it made incredible sense to me because of his incredible talent to con- nect with people," said Bill Cassell, a longtime Edwards friend and former Jewish federation campaign chairman in Greensboro. Randall Kaplan, a Greensboro busi- nessman who is a board member for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, remembers early meetings Edwards held with Jewish leaders. "When he first started considering the Senate race, he was a great listener," Sen. John Edwards Kaplan said. "He was as knowledgeable as someone can get when they first run for office but didn't have first-hand expe- rience." Edwards reached out to the Jewish community as a Senate candidate but didn't court Jews the same way other aspiring politicians do. "He would cer- tainly have ties to individuals in the Jewish community, but I don't know that he has had any ties in any formal way," Broun said. Upon his election in 1998, Edwards continued listening. "John would always make himself available to us," Kaplan said. "The one thing John didn't do was pander. He really came and listened." As a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Edwards soon was boning up on foreign policy: "A lot of times, you go into a Senate office and they just repeat back to you the party line," Kaplan said. "With John, he would really listen and you could tell he was really thinking about it." Kaplan now advises Edwards' cam- paign on Israel and Middle East issues. Edwards visited Israel with Intelligence Committee colleagues in 2001 when a suicide bomber attacked a Sbarro restau- rant in downtown Jerusalem. "I think the trip left on him an understanding," Kaplan said. "He really gets the strategic issues, the existential issues." In a statement to JTA, Edwards said he would increase U.S. engagement in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with the appointment of a senior envoy to the region, and he signaled support for Israel's anti-terror tactics, including the security barrier Israel is erecting in the West Bank. 'As long as the Palestinian leadership fails to end terror, Israel has a right to take measures to defend itself," Edwards said. "Such defensive measures are not the cause of terrorism — they are the response to terrorism." Domestic Issues Edwards speaks about,the war in Iraq and other foreign policy issues in cam- paign stops, but his real connection with voters comes when discussing social poli- cy. His platform focuses largely on pro- viding health care for every child, a free year of college education and tax cuts for businesses that keep jobs in the United States. Edwards has called for changes to the Patriot Act, which some say strips away civil liberties in pursuit of intelligence to fight terrorism. In his statement, Edwards said he sup- ports faith-based charities delivering social services "in a manner consistent with the First Amendment" and said the charities should follow anti-discrimina- tion standards. Edwards, a Methodist, has a good grasp on the religious politics of his state, friends say. "Up until the last 15 years, this was a fairly lonely place for Jews and Catholics," Broun said. "I think he understands that." In his statement to JTA , Edwards said, "Faith is enormously important to me personally and to tens of millions of Americans." Edwards' friends say the candidate is privately spiritual. Cassell said that Elizabeth Edwards "wouldn't let him be any other way." The couple, married in 1977, have four children. ❑