Site Search
To add or update your business directory listing, click here.
► Accommodations
► Activities
► Contractors & Builders
► Dining
► Financial Services
► Gift Shops
► Health Clubs & Fitness
► Insurance
► Legal Services
► Medical Services
► NH Products
Edwards turns to record as lawyer
By PHILIP ELLIOTT
Associated Press Writer
Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2007
BOW – Democrat John Edwards says his experience as a trial lawyer makes him the presidential contender best able to give voters hope - and to give the establishment grief.
Edwards, a former senator from North Carolina, has focused his campaign on pledges to change a government system he says is rigged against most voters.
"While you shop (for candidates), I hope you will think about two key things: Who can you trust to tell you the truth about what's wrong in Washington, and who can you trust to fight like hell to make it right?" Edwards said during a town hall-style meeting Monday. "Those are the two things we need in the next president of the United States."
Edwards then turned to his background as a trial lawyer and work on behalf of plaintiffs.
"What I did was I gave them hope. And then I walked into that courtroom and I gave the company hell because they deserved it," he said. "That's the kind of fight we need. We need a president of the United States who will give you hope, who will stand up and fight for you to reclaim democracy. ... But we also need somebody who is ready for that fight, somebody who has been engaged in that fight. I've been in this fight my entire life. It didn't start last year. It didn't start in 2004."
Edwards said he is the candidate with a record of upsetting the system and standing firm.
"I won. I just didn't fight, I won and I won ... not just because I was right, but because I never gave up and I will never give up."
He also joked about the wealth his courtroom-based work gave him.
"Today, as many of you have heard, I don't live in a small house," he said to laughter.
Earlier Monday, Edwards appeared on New Hampshire Public Radio's morning show, "The Exchange," and said his Republican rivals who say they want to eliminate the estate tax are misleading voters.
"This is one of those cases where what they're saying is true, and the policy has nothing to do with what they are saying. It's a complete disconnect," he said. "Because as (a caller) just pointed out, as long as we have a four, five, six million dollar exemption - or seven, seven million dollar exemption - every small business and every small farm in America will pay no estate taxes. None. Zero. The people who are taxed are people with huge estates, people with two hundred, three hundred, four hundred million dollar estates."
A rival campaign said that in 2001, the then-senator opposed a measure that would have exempted estates smaller than $2 million and businesses valued at less than $3.4 million.
At present, estates worth up to $2 million this year and next will be exempt from the federal estate tax. Portions of estates above that threshold will be taxed at 45 percent. In 2009, the exemption level rises to $3.5 million, and by 2010 the estate tax will be repealed - but only for a year. Unless Congress changes the law, the tax returns in 2011 with an exemption threshold of only $1 million and a top tax rate of 55 percent.
At an afternoon round-table discussion with Manchester educators, Edwards said only an outsider could change the way Washington works, including President Bush's education policy.
"That crowd inside the Beltway in Washington thinks they know everything. ... They think everybody else out here in the world - me included - we're just a bunch of hicks who don't know what's going on," Edwards said. "Well, I got news for them: There's a lot of good, smart common sense out here in the real world. That crowd who thinks they know everything, those are the ones who said No Child Left Behind was going to be a wonderful, great panacea."

.jpg)

Print
Email
Mobile
Reader comments
YOUR COMMENTS
John Edwards actually believes that being a trial lawyer is a good thing??
He thinks that lawyers do a good thing by suing the big guys? How about the small businesses destroyed by frivolous law suits? How about the skyrocketing health care costs caused by ridiculous medical malpractice suits? How about rising liability costs for every type of insurance paid by American citizens(illegal aliens of course have no insurance, therefore they don't get sued)? Ask Mr. Edwards what percentage of all the money won by the states from tobacco companies actually is used for anti-smoking campaigns. After all, the states really don't want you to quit smoking...they would lose too much tax revenue. Trial lawyers like Mr. Edwards make the big bucks because most businesses and insurance companies settle because it is not economically reasonable or they simply cannot afford to go to trial.
As for a 2 million dollar estate exemption...a small farm or business, or an individual owning just a few pieces of property in todays market could easily reach that amount.
And Mr. Edwards, common sense would dictate that the feds get out of the education business and stop passing unfunded mandates. Give that money back to the states and communities where the people know better how to spend their dollars.
- Cathie, Chester
NOTE: If you have visited this page before, newer comments may be hidden. Press F5, or hold down the Ctrl key while reloading or refreshing the page. (Another option for Firefox users is the Clear Cache add-on.)