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John Edwards and moral leadership

October 21, 2005 By Charley on the MTA

Unfortunately, because of work commitments, I came to the Harvard Kennedy School of Government courtyard about halfway into his speech. There were a few hundred people there, I would guess. (A well-dressed and alert-looking fellow stopped me and asked, "Who’sthat speaking?" Now… I didn’t want to be a jerk, but I might havegaped a bit: What do you have to do to get famous around here? Is running for Vice-President on a major ticket not enough? No, I didn’t say that.)

With his typical clarity, Edwards exhorted the crowd, especially the students, to take moral leadership of the issue of poverty. He quoted an unnamed DC labor leader: "The people we’ve been waiting for … are us." Edwards sees the grassroots as the place where movements — that’s his term — are born, and that the populace at large cannot wait for elected officials to act; elected "leaders" must be made to follow a popular engagement.

So, when people are sensitized to human suffering and motivated to act, what are the next steps? That was on my mind going into the interview.

David asked first about the sense of national community that Edwards appeals to. Edwards saw that sense when John F. Kennedy was president, but feels it’s been missing for a long time. Hurricane Katrina was a signal moment in creating a sense of community again: "These people are part of our country!"

David then asked, Why do you want to talk to bloggers? Sen. Edwards, it turns out, is a big blog fan.  His One America Committee has its own, along with a videoblog, podcasts, the whole bit. He likes the real, immediate and unfiltered communication through blogs.

I asked, What is the best way to get elected officials to notice the issue and act? Edwards is concerned with helping create a political movement against poverty. Currently elected officials don’t see it in their own interests to do anything. "You are the people to do it," he said.

But concretely, what does that mean? What’s the "funnel", by which I mean, where does all the action and organizing and publicizing lead? Is it Letters to the Editor? Direct political action? Edwards hopes that blogs, reflecting citizen-level energy and enthusiasm, can help achieve a tipping point in which the mainstream media eventually picks up an issue and forces government officials to act.

That’s an interesting, non-partisan strategy, for which I have a lot of sympathy: For all that we choose officials based on their ideology or temperament, they are all subject  to circumstances and Zeitgeists beyond their control. Nixon signed the Endangered Species Act; Clinton signed welfare reform; Reagan signed COBRA; George H.W. Bush signed the Americans with Disabilities Act. Why? They pretty much had to.

I asked Edwards about the fact that many young people are drawn to volunteerism, but political involvement is low; people will volunteer in a soup kitchen but not question why people need a soup kitchen. Can these folks be engaged? Edwards feels that young people haven’t lost their idealism, but that no one in the political arena has asked them to act. But any movement addressing systemic poverty must reflect their integrity. This is really the nutshell of Edwards’ challenge to his young audience, and all of us: Do It Yourself.

(To date David and I have no idea howSen. Edwards’ folks, or the KSG organizers, or whoever, got our namesin particular, but we were grateful to have the opportunity to talkwith him.)

(By the way, see also Taegan Goddard’s three questions for John Edwards.)

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Comments

  1. jude-nagurney-camwell says

    October 24, 2005 at 11:26 am

    see: Bloggers: We Are the Ones We’ve Been Waiting For

  2. david says

    October 24, 2005 at 6:02 pm

    Yes, I know it’s cheating. But Charley did such a good job on this post, and summarized our conversation with Sen. Edwards so accurately, that writing my own take on it would be wasted effort, since I have nothing to add. Great job, Charley, and thanks again to Sen. Edwards for taking the time to meet with us.

  3. aldon-hynes says

    October 24, 2005 at 8:54 pm

    I went to hear Sen. Edwards when he was at Yale. There were about 1300 people that went to hear him there.I spoke with him afterwards and have been speaking with people working at Opportunity Rocks.I believe that a new generation of Freedom Riders, blogging about their experiences in the trenches fighting poverty can bring about the tipping point you talk about.Check out this and this for more of my comments.Aldon

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