Wesley Blake Edwards — better known as the kid brother
of vice presidential nominee John Edwards — is scheduled to go on trial
today in Colorado, answering 10-year-old charges of driving while
intoxicated.
Wesley Edwards has been arrested on numerous
occasions for driving drunk. He has skipped out of court appearances. So,
while he finally faces the music, political junkies must be wondering: Is
he Roger Clinton lite? Or perhaps the second coming of Billy Carter?
Democrats would probably like to sweep Wesley Edwards under the
rug. They shouldn't, for two reasons: John Edwards' tribulations with his
younger sibling only enhance his image as the only candidate with true
"Joe Sixpack" roots. And, as John Edwards grapples with his brother's
problems, we may actually learn something compelling about this man who
wants to lead us.
Most American families, rich or poor, have some
black sheep — a brother or sister or cousin — who causes immense pain to
the rest of the family as relatives fret over whether to bail him or her
out yet again. What humanizes John Edwards, though, is that his brother's
situation particularly identifies him not with the elite but with the rest
of us.
When a sheep goes astray in a working-class family, there
are usually not enough money, time and connections to do much about it,
especially when the family's efforts have already been expended on the
star, say a John Edwards or a Bill Clinton.
Working-class families
that produce presidents are no longer exceptional, and so we are becoming
more familiar with the antics of the siblings left behind. There was
Donald Nixon's "loan" from Howard Hughes to support his marketing of
Nixonburgers. There was the infamous Billybeer venture, not to mention
Billy Carter's registration as an "agent" of the Libyan government. And
Roger Clinton's drug arrest hardly added luster to that family's
image.
Contrast those tales with similar stories among presidential
families that are rich and prominent. In poor families, the star often
gets the biggest slice at the proverbial family table, but in well-to-do
households, it is usually the laggard who gets the most parental
investment. Jeb Bush was an honors student, graduating college at 20 to
become a rising star in Florida politics. Less successful Bush brothers
Neil and George W. kept needing — and getting — second chances as they
flailed about in the business world. Remember Neil and the Silverado
savings-and-loan scandal? Or a young, fun-loving George W.'s failed
attempt at drilling oil?
Or take the case of the Kennedys: The
family even went so far as to strong-arm the head of the Massachusetts
Department of Motor Vehicles into backdating Ted Kennedy's driver's
license renewal so that he would have been a legal driver when he drove
Mary Jo Kopechne to her death at Chappaquiddick.
George W. and Ted
Kennedy didn't turn out so bad after all, despite being black sheep. Just
goes to show what wealth and power can do to smooth over family
problems.
Of course, when we elect an individual, we get a
family. The more we see that family in action, the better we know the
candidate. Siblings in crisis make for a good eyewitness
opportunity.
When Jimmy Carter was confronted with Billy Carter's
Libyan shenanigans, he merely remarked that his brother was a private
citizen and free to do what he wanted. This might be seen as a signal of
Carter's nonconfrontational style, not to mention his attitude toward
discipline and loyalty. By contrast, when then-Gov. Bill Clinton was faced
with the sting operation in Arkansas that would land his brother in jail,
he did not stand in the way of the police. That might seem coldhearted or
self-serving.
John Edwards, however, may have gotten it just
right: He has been generous with his money, going so far as to buy his
brother the house in which he lives, but he hasn't been afraid to show
tough love — forcing Wesley Edwards to own up to his outstanding warrants.
If John Edwards deals with political friends and foes the way he
dealt with his problematic brother, then he should be a great
leader.



