Traditionally the vice-presidential nominee is the party attack dog, taking direct aim at the other side. But Edwards seems ill-suited for this role. He refused to attack his fellow Democrats in the party primaries -- which may be one reason Kerry was willing to put him on the ticket. And even when he criticized the president or decried the state of the U.S. economy, he never seemed to muster so much anger as wistful regret. With his ah-shucks manner and boyish good looks, he managed to sound optimistic about the future even when he was complaining about the present. He's no Richard Nixon, or even Al Gore. In fact, the vice-presidential nominee he most reminds me of is Dan Quayle -- minus Quayle's more impressive Senate accomplishments.
This leaves the hatchet man role to Kerry himself or party surrogates like Democratic National Committee chairman Terry McAuliffe. Although McAuliffe excels in the role -- there is not a nastier guy in politics today -- few people even know who he is. Kerry could go on the attack, but when he does, he comes off as even more dour than his already doleful persona projects, and that may wear thin by the fall.
Democrats will try to convince Americans that we are enduring the worst economic recovery since the Great Depression, that we are as unsafe as we were on September 11, if not more so, and that George W. Bush is a liar.
But the facts don't comport with Democrats' reality. We've had 10 straight months of solid jobs gains, and good economic growth. The GDP increased by roughly 4 percent in each of the last two quarters, a rate higher than in the comparable quarters leading up to Bill Clinton's re-election in 1996. And we've had the best rate of consecutive, three-year gains in productivity in almost 50 years. And despite the desire of our enemies to spill American blood everywhere they can, we haven't been attacked on U.S. soil.
That leaves the Democrats to hammer away at the president's truthfulness. But will John Kerry, who's changed political positions as often as his underwear, make a convincing case that he's more of a straight-shooter than George W. Bush? I guess we'll just have to wait until Nov. 2 to learn the answer.