By The Prowler on 11.14.02 @ 12:03AM
A huge winner in Election 2002 learns to wait his turn. Plus: John Edwards -- in the footsteps of Henry James.
MODEL PATIENCE
Fresh from an amazing GOP sweep in Georgia, which saw Republicans
win a Senate seat, two House seats, and the governorship, the
state's Republican Party chairman Ralph Reed would
probably love to capitalize by claiming a high profile political
position in Washington. If this were a few years ago, you'd
probably be hearing unnamed sources touting him for everything from
head of the Republican National Committee to White House political
director. But not now.
"Ralph had great political sense back when he was running the
Christian Coalition, but I think even he would say he maybe wanted
a bit too much too soon," says a political ally of Reed's in
Washington.
That was true even after Reed moved back down to Georgia in
1998. He arrived in Atlanta touting his new political consulting
group, looking to have a big impact in Dixie politics -- and flamed
out. His candidates rarely succeeded. Then Reed was dragged into
the Enron mess, after it was leaked he'd played on his Bush
contacts to pursue consulting jobs from Enron in its heyday.
"It wasn't like he was isolated down there in Georgia. That's
where he wanted to be," says the Reed ally. "But you have to know
that his running the table for the GOP down there last week has
just confirmed what everyone thought he was going to do a few years
ago."
Reed, in fact, used the Karl Rove model to
build the Georgia sweep, working with the White House to find
winners, not necessarily dyed in the wool, but unelectable,
conservatives.
If Reed wants to build on that success, however, he will
probably have to do it from Atlanta -- for now. He will probably
serve an additional two years as head of the Georgia party before
making a move on his own. As it stands, there isn't much of an
opportunity for him in Washington. Bush strategist and key
fundraiser Jack Oliver likely will remain running
day to day operations at the RNC, particularly given his own
success in the 2002 races.
Some say Reed may eventually take a shot at elective office. But
the next big-ticket race is 2004, when Sen. Zell
Miller comes up for re-election. Miller is probably
unbeatable in that race, although he could surprise some and choose
not to run for another term. Recall that Miller initially balked at
coming out of retirement to serve out the term of the late
Paul Coverdell back in 2000. Of course, Miller
could block any Reed challenge by simply walking across the aisle
as many Republicans -- and probably a few liberal Democrats -- wish
he would.
"Reed can afford to wait," says the ally. "He's in a great
position and he knows it."
INNOCENCE ABROAD
Sen. John Edwards is hitting the campaign trail
hard, now that it appears the opportunity is ripe for his
presidential candidacy. Earlier this week he made a high profile
policy speech on the economy, and because his background is so thin
on foreign affairs he's also taking his show overseas.
Edwards staffers recall how their boss traveled to Israel two
summers ago for photo-ops and to get a handle on the Middle East
situation. Last winter he traveled to Pakistan and Afghanistan. Now
in early December, Edwards will travel to Europe.
The planned itinerary calls for him to meet with NATO officials
to discuss Iraq. He also hopes to meet with government leaders.
According to an Edwards campaign staffer, the now-senior senator
from North Carolina asked his sometime adviser, former President
Bill Clinton, to make calls on his behalf to
British Prime Minister Tony Blair and German
chancellor Gerhard Schroeder to see if they might
meet with him.
It won't just be Edwards in the rooms with them. He's bringing
along an all-access video crew to shoot much of his trip. "The idea
is that some of those shots will be used for campaign ads down the
road to blunt Republican criticism that he's not plugged in enough
on the international front," says the staffer.
topics:
Bill Clinton, Iraq, Israel, Pakistan, NATO