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Contributors
Carol Platt Liebau - Columnist
Carol
Platt Liebau is editorial director and a senior member of
the CaliforniaRepublic.org editorial
board. She is an attorney, political analyst and commentator
based in San Marino, CA, and has appeared on the Fox News
Channel,
MSNBC, CNN, Orange County News Channel, Cox Cable and a variety
of radio programs throughout the United States. A graduate
of
Princeton
University
and Harvard Law School, Carol Platt Liebau also served as the
first female managing editor of the Harvard Law Review.
[go to Liebau index]
John
Edwards Is No Dan Quayle
...He’s Much Less Qualified...
[Carol
Platt Liebau] 7/12//04
In the midst
of the media frenzy greeting the selection of John Edwards
as John Kerry’s running mate, it’s worth
taking a quick trip back in time. As rapturous praise from Democratic
partisans and respectful assessments from the major media fill
the air, it’s impossible not to contrast the reception
that U.S. Senator Dan Quayle received when he was chosen as George
H.W. Bush’s running mate back in 1988.
Back then, Americans were treated to lengthy
media discourses on Quayle’s inexperience and unfitness for office. Well,
it’s safe to bet that no one will be hearing that tune
from the Democrats -- now that their putative nominee’s
vice-presidential candidate is a first-term senator. In contrast,
when Quayle was chosen, he was in his seventh year of Senate
service, after having spent two terms in the House of Representatives.
John Edwards defeated a fairly weak though worthy
first-term incumbent with 51% of the vote to become a senator.
Dan Quayle
beat a liberal legend, Senator Birch Bayh (father of current
Indiana Senator Evan Bayh) – who had authored the 25th
amendment on presidential succession, the 26th amendment offering
18-year-olds the right to vote, and the Equal Rights Amendment.
And Quayle won with 54% of the vote.
Edwards resigned his Senate seat as it became
clear that he had little chance of winning a second term. But
Dan Quayle went
on to be reelected with a whopping 61% of the vote – the
first senator in Indiana history to pass the 60% mark in a Senate
election. And that was in 1986, when many other Republican members
of the Senate class of 1980 went down to defeat.
But Quayle doesn’t best Edwards merely in political terms.
Unlike Edwards, Quayle actually had a record of substantial accomplishment
as a senator. He served as chairman of the Defense Acquisition
Subcommittee, investigating Defense Department procurement, and
later worked with Sam Nunn and Robert Byrd on defense issues.
Quayle was chosen by his Republican colleagues to chair a special
committee in 1984 to study committee ratios and procedural matters
in the Senate – a matter of vital importance to Republicans
seeking to retain control. And working with Ted Kennedy, Quayle
was instrumental in the creation and implementation of a program
to place formerly disadvantaged and dislocated workers in jobs.
According to an evaluation of the Jobs Training Partnership Act,
over 70% of four million adults found real private-sector jobs
after completing the training program.
As for Edwards, the Los
Angeles Times, no bastion
of right-wing thinking, put it delicately, describing the senator
as one who “has
made his mark in the Senate more by talking than doing.” He
has virtually no significant legislation to his name, and his
voting record is undistinguished. Edwards’ shining moments
have come through his often unfair attacks on judicial nominees – and
his defense of Bill Clinton during the ex-president’s impeachment
trial. And as an erstwhile member of the Senate Intelligence
Committee, it might be interesting to ask Edwards – now
a vociferous critic of American foreign policy – what,
if any, guidance he offered when the policy was being formulated.
The selection of Dan Quayle has gone down in
history as a “mistake” on
the part of President George H.W. Bush, indicative of a lack
of judgment. More than anything, it was, perhaps, Quayle’s
initial ebullience, coupled with implacable media hostility,
that doomed a once promising career and public image. John Edwards
has none of Quayle’s substance – but he does have
the glibness that Dan Quayle lacked. It’s worth wondering
if that will be enough to get him the kind of favorable press
coverage that Vice President Quayle could only have dreamed of. CRO
Columnist
Carol Platt Liebau is a political analyst, commentator and
CaliforniaRepublic.org editorial director based in San Marino,
CA.
copyright
2004
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