Wife Blasted for Keeping Edwards Affair Secret
Tue Aug 26, 1:33 PM EDT

RALEIGH, North Carolina — Two weeks after a devastating revelation sent her
husband into political exile, Elizabeth Edwards isn't getting the steady
sympathy usually afforded to a woman scorned.

Instead, she's faced criticism from dedicated Democrats who think she was
too willing to keep the affair a secret to help John Edwards' political
ambitions, as well as her own.

At a time when she was expected to hold a prominent role in pushing an
agenda of improved health care for Americans, she stands silent. While
fellow Democrats converge in Denver, Colorado, to nominate Barack Obama for
president, Edwards remains in seclusion in North Carolina.

It seems an odd way to treat a woman with incurable cancer wronged by a
cheating husband, the latest in a series of deep hardships in life that
includes the death of a teenage son.

But some former followers have questioned the recklessness of keeping the
affair under wraps even though her husband -- a former U.S. senator,
two-time presidential candidate and the 2004 vice presidential nominee --
said he confessed the affair in 2006, before the campaign began in earnest
the next year.

"I think she's complicit," said Brad Crone, a Raleigh-based Democratic
consultant. "Obviously, she knew. While she's the victim, she clearly didn't
stand in the way of the cover-up."

It wasn't until earlier this month that John Edwards acknowledged publicly
he'd had an affair with Rielle Hunter, a rookie filmmaker hired by his
political action committee.

On a liberal blog that Elizabeth Edwards frequents, she explained why she
stayed silent after her husband told her of the affair: "This was our
private matter, and I frankly wanted it to be private because as painful as
it was I did not want to have to play it out on a public stage as well."

Many people have come to know Elizabeth Edwards, 59, as a more forthright,
revealing woman.

She wrote a memoir in 2007 that brought readers into the most wrenching
moments of her life -- the death of the couple's 16-year-old son and her
2004 breast cancer diagnosis. An attorney who worked in private practice and
also taught at the University of North Carolina's law school, she first
found out about the cancer the day after her husband and John Kerry lost
their bid for the White House four years ago.

She has always had a passion for politics. Known for routinely writing about
health care policy on the Internet, she has served as a visiting fellow at
Harvard, where she held discussions with students and gave a speech after
her husband dropped from the presidential race earlier this year.
Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama said in June he
would be "partnering" with her on health care policy, and she was expected
to serve as a campaign voice to challenge Republican candidate John McCain
on the issue.

Yet during a visit to North Carolina two weeks after Edwards admitted to
cheating on his wife, Obama didn't mention Elizabeth Edwards -- or her
husband.

"It's a setback for both of them," said Chris Lehane, a Democratic
consultant who helped President Clinton through his cheating scandal. "The
question for her -- as well as for him -- is what is their foundation? What
gives them a platform to engage in public issues?

"Their big challenge is convincing people that they will continue to be
active in politics and they're going to continue to have a voice."

In a post on the liberal blog Daily Kos, where Edwards has her own diary,
she pleaded for privacy and later seemed to explain why she stuck by her
spouse and his presidential ambitions.

"An imperfect man with a truly progressive vision who spoke to and for those
whom others ignored? Yes, that is who I supported," she wrote. "An imperfect
man who had come to face his own imperfections and was seeking to redeem
himself to those closest to him? Yes, that is who I supported."

Some responded to the affair with words of kindness, while others angrily
suggested that keeping the secret was no less a sin that the one committed
by her philandering husband.

"She knew president with this bomb waiting to go off. She did. She kinda
loses my sympathy," wrote one poster.

"I believe we are all owed a huge apology, not self-serving claims for pity
by both John and Elizabeth Edwards, who both knew about the affair and both
decided to go forward and seek the Democratic candidacy, regardless of the
Titanic risk," wrote another.

Elizabeth Edwards is famously a denizen of the Internet. But she has not
posted under her own name at Daily Kos since that day, nor has she posted
anything on the Web site of the Center for American Progress, a liberal
think tank in Washington where she writes about health care.

A spokeswoman for the center, Andrea Purse, said Elizabeth Edwards still has
a job there, but declined to comment further about her future role. Both
Elizabeth and John Edwards have refused several requests for an interview.

Since her husband's admission, the only window into what Elizabeth Edwards
has been thinking came from a People magazine interview with her brother and
a close friend. They said she decided not to leave her husband, in part,
because she is a mother of two young children fighting a cancer that has
spread to her bone and cannot be cured.

"There was anguish -- excruciating anguish -- for her in dealing with this,"
Hargrave McElroy, a friend, told the magazine. "She was angry and furious
and everything, but at one point she had to make a choice: Do I kick him
out, or do we have a 30-year marriage that can be rebuilt."

If the story was engineered to defend Edwards' decision, it has failed to
create an outpouring of understanding.

"I thought it was very naive on both their parts," said Betsy Wells, who was
an Edwards delegate at the Democratic convention four years ago and worked
for each of his three campaigns for office. "It would be very sad if he were
the nominee of our party right now."


-- 
"Usually when people are sad, they don't do anything. They just cry over
their condition. But when they get angry, they bring about a change."
- Malcolm X, Malcolm X Speaks, 1965

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