Covering Edwards’ trial now is like “leafing through a
catalogue of the sad and the sordid,” says a New Yorker writer, concluding that
it “raises questions about campaign finance, the business of image-making, the
pivotal role of a single large donor, and how much we really care about a
candidate’s character.”
Yet, how much can we know when that “character” is
largely a charade he constructs to hide even from himself?
In 2007, I wrote in defense of media probing the lives of candidates: “John Edwards and Mitt Romney are grown men who made a lot of money and now want the most powerful job in the world. All this attention goes with the process of trying to get it.”
Romney has no sexual skeletons but his parade of
false selves is as daunting as those of Edwards, for whom millions voted as
Vice President in 2004 and supported for the Democratic nomination four years
later, only to learn that they knew nothing of his true self at all. (Venture
capitalists and negligence lawyers don’t share their inner lives or even
examine them much.)
Now, there would not be much point in throwing the
book at John Edwards before we close it, but let voters who swooned over the
likes of Michele Bachmann, Rick Perry and Herman Cain before settling for Mitt Romney ask themselves how much they really know about their choice.
Time is running out.
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