There is a (state) House in New Orleans...

North Carolina is sending more than 70 lawmakers and legislative staffers this week to the National Conference of State Legislature's annual meeting in New Orleans, where House Speaker Joe Hackney will be installed Thursday as president of the organization's executive committee.

The list includes 42 lawmakers, all but five of them House members. Senate leader Marc Basnight, a Manteo Democrat, is among the five senators, all of them Democrats. Five of the 37 House members are Republican, Dan Kane reports.

Thirty-two legislative staffers were planning to attend, though one of them, retiring Fiscal Research Director Lynn Muchmore, later decided to stay home.

Hackney's ascendancy may have drawn more interest among lawmakers to the annual meeting this year. In 2006, roughly 20 lawmakers attended the annual meeting in Nashville, and last year about 30 lawmakers went to the annual meeting in Boston, said Wesley Taylor, the legislature's financial services manager.

Expenses won't become available until after the lawmakers and staffers return and file expense reports, Taylor said.

More after the jump.

Let history blaze its path

Description

John Edwards' speech as he dropped out of the 2008 Democratic presidential primary in New Orleans, La. From prepared remarks.

Date (Month)

January

Date (Day)

30

Date (Year)

Transcript

<p>Thank you all very much. We&#39;re very proud to be back here. </p><p>During the spring of 2006, I had the extraordinary experience of bringing 700 college kids here to New Orleans to work. These are kids who gave up their spring break to come to New Orleans to work, to rehabilitate houses, because of their commitment as Americans, because they believed in what was possible, and because they cared about their country.</p><p>I began my presidential campaign here to remind the country that we, as citizens and as a government, have a moral responsibility to each other, and what we do together matters. We must do better, if we want to live up to the great promise of this country that we all love so much. </p><p>It is appropriate that I come here today. It&#39;s time for me to step aside so that history can blaze its path.</p><p>We do not know who will take the final steps to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, but what we do know is that our Democratic Party will make history. We will be strong, we will be unified, and with our convictions and a little backbone we will take back the White House in November and we&#39;ll create hope and opportunity for this country.</p><p>This journey of ours began right here in New Orleans. It was a December morning in the Lower Ninth Ward when people went to work, not just me, but lots of others went to work with shovels and hammers to help restore a house that had been destroyed by the storm. </p><p>We joined together in a city that had been abandoned by our government and had been forgotten, but not by us. We knew that they still mourned the dead, that they were still stunned by the destruction, and that they wondered when all those cement steps in all those vacant lots would once again lead to a door, to a home, and to a dream.</p><p>We came here to the Lower Ninth Ward to rebuild. And we&#39;re going to rebuild today and work today, and we will continue to come back. We will never forget the heartache and we&#39;ll always be here to bring them hope, so that someday, one day, the trumpets will sound in Musicians&#39; Village, where we are today, play loud across Lake Ponchartrain, so that working people can come marching in and those steps once again can lead to a family living out the dream in America. </p><p>We sat with poultry workers in Mississippi, janitors in Florida, nurses in California.</p><p>We listened as child after child told us about their worry about whether we would preserve the planet. </p><p>We listened to worker after worker say “the economy is tearing my family apart.&quot;</p><p>We walked the streets of Cleveland, where house after house was in foreclosure. </p><p>And we said, &quot;We&#39;re better than this. And economic justice in America is our cause.&quot;</p><p>And we spent a day, a summer day, in Wise, Virginia, with a man named James Lowe, who told us the story of having been born with a cleft palate. He had no health care coverage. His family couldn&#39;t afford to fix it. And finally some good Samaritan came along and paid for his cleft palate to be fixed, which allowed him to speak for the first time. But they did it when he was 50 years old. His amazing story, though, gave this campaign voice: universal health care for every man, woman and child in America. That is our cause. </p><p>And we do this—we do this for each other in America. We don&#39;t turn away from a neighbor in their time of need. Because every one of us knows that what—but for the grace of God, there goes us. The American people have never stopped doing this, even when their government walked away, and walked away it has from hardworking people, and, yes, from the poor, those who live in poverty in this country.</p><p>For decades, we stopped focusing on those struggles. They didn&#39;t register in political polls, they didn&#39;t get us votes and so we stopped talking about it. I don&#39;t know how it started. I don&#39;t know when our party began to turn away from the cause of working people, from the fathers who were working three jobs literally just to pay the rent, mothers sending their kids to bed wrapped up in their clothes and in coats because they couldn&#39;t afford to pay for heat. </p><p>We know that our brothers and sisters have been bullied into believing that they can&#39;t organize and can&#39;t put a union in the workplace. Well, in this campaign, we didn&#39;t turn our heads. We looked them square in the eye and we said, &quot;We see you, we hear you, and we are with you. And we will never forget you.&quot; And I have a feeling that if the leaders of our great Democratic Party continue to hear the voices of working people, a proud progressive will occupy the White House.</p><p>Now, I&#39;ve spoken to both Senator Clinton and Senator Obama. They have both pledged to me and more importantly through me to America, that they will make ending poverty central to their campaign for the presidency. </p><p>And more importantly, they have pledged to me that as President of the United States they will make ending poverty and economic inequality central to their Presidency. This is the cause of my life and I now have their commitment to engage in this cause.</p><p>And I want to say to everyone here, on the way here today, we passed under a bridge that carried the interstate where 100 to 200 homeless Americans sleep every night. And we stopped, we got out, we went in and spoke to them. </p><p>There was a minister there who comes every morning and feeds the homeless out of her own pocket. She said she has no money left in her bank account, she struggles to be able to do it, but she knows it’s the moral, just and right thing to do. And I spoke to some of the people who were there and as I was leaving, one woman said to me, &quot;You won’t forget us, will you? Promise me you won’t forget us.&quot; Well, I say to her and I say to all of those who are struggling in this country, we will never forget you. We will fight for you. We will stand up for you.</p><p>But I want to say this—I want to say this because it&#39;s important. With all of the injustice that we’ve seen, I can say this, America’s hour of transformation is upon us. It may be hard to believe when we have bullets flying in Baghdad and it may be hard to believe when it costs $58 to fill your car up with gas. It may be hard to believe when your school doesn’t have the right books for your kids. It’s hard to speak out for change when you feel like your voice is not being heard. </p><p>But I do hear it. We hear it. This Democratic Party hears you. We hear you, once again. And we will lift you up with our dream of what’s possible. </p><p>One America, one America that works for everybody. </p><p>One America where struggling towns and factories come back to life because we finally transformed our economy by ending our dependence on oil.</p><p>One America where the men who work the late shift and the women who get up at dawn to drive a two-hour commute and the young person who closes the store to save for college. They will be honored for that work. </p><p>One America where no child will go to bed hungry because we will finally end the moral shame of 37 million people living in poverty.</p><p>One America where every single man, woman and child in this country has health care. </p><p>One America with one public school system that works for all of our children.</p><p>One America that finally brings this war in Iraq to an end. And brings our service members home with the hero&#39;s welcome that they have earned and that they deserve. </p><p>Today, I am suspending my campaign for the Democratic nomination for the Presidency.</p><p>But I want to say this to everyone: with Elizabeth, with my family, with my friends, with all of you and all of your support, this son of a millworker’s gonna be just fine. Our job now is to make certain that America will be fine. </p><p>And I want to thank everyone who has worked so hard—all those who have volunteered, my dedicated campaign staff who have worked absolutely tirelessly in this campaign. </p><p>And I want to say a personal word to those I’ve seen literally in the last few days—those I saw in Oklahoma yesterday, in Missouri, last night in Minnesota—who came to me and said don&#39;t forget us. Speak for us. We need your voice. I want you to know that you almost changed my mind, because I hear your voice, I feel you, and your cause it our cause. Your country needs you—every single one of you. </p><p>All of you who have been involved in this campaign and this movement for change and this cause, we need you. It is in our hour of need that your country needs you. Don’t turn away, because we have not just a city of New Orleans to rebuild. We have an American house to rebuild. </p><p>This work goes on. It goes on right here in Musicians&#39; Village. There are homes to build here, and in neighborhoods all along the Gulf. The work goes on for the students in crumbling schools just yearning for a chance to get ahead. It goes on for day care workers, for steel workers risking their lives in cities all across this country. And the work goes on for two hundred thousand men and women who wore the uniform of the United States of America, proud veterans, who go to sleep every night under bridges, or in shelters, or on grates, just as the people we saw on the way here today. Their cause is our cause. <br />Their struggle is our struggle. Their dreams are our dreams. </p><p>Do not turn away from these great struggles before us. Do not give up on the causes that we have fought for. Do not walk away from what’s possible, because it’s time for all of us, all of us together, to make the two Americas one. </p><p>Thank you. God bless you, and let&#39;s go to work. Thank you all very much. </p>

Edwards breaks from the script

The biggest tear-jerker moment in John Edwards' speech:

When he broke from his written script to talk about one last campaign stop—a New Orleans bridge where more than 100 homeless residents sleep every night and are fed by a local pastor with money from her own pocket.

Edwards described how, en route to giving his speech, he stopped his bus, got out and moved among the people there under the bridge.

"A woman said to me 'You won't forget us, will you? Promise us you won't forget us.'"

Edwards: I will return to New Orleans

John Edwards said that he will return to New Orleans.

In his concession speech today, he said that he will work on a Habitat for Humanity today and return to the Hurricane Katrina-ravaged city in the future.

"One day, the trumpets will sound in Musicians Village," he said.

Edwards called for universal health care, an end to the Iraq war and a return to fighting poverty. He said that both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton have told him they will make ending poverty central to their presidencies.

"This is the cause of my life," he said, "And I now have their commitment to this cause."

He said that things will work out for him.

"This son of a millworker is going to be just fine," he said. "Our job now is to make sure that America is fine."

Dec. 28, 2006 - Jan. 30, 2008

John Edwards' second presidential run lasted for 399 days.

After the jump, a timeline of his campaign.

Edwards planned poverty speech

John Edwards' New Orleans speech was supposed to be about poverty.

The Edwards campaign sent out a press release at 1 p.m. yesterday, saying that he would give a "major policy address" at the Musicians Village and then work on a Habitat for Humanity house.

On Wednesday, January 30, 2008, Senator John Edwards will return to New Orleans to deliver a major policy address on poverty, the great moral issue of our time. In recent days and weeks, national discussion of important issues like ending poverty has given way to sniping and personal attacks between the two frontrunner candidates. Ending poverty and fighting for the middle class is the cause of John Edwards' life — and he will urge the nation to refocus on this important issue.

Edwards' decision to give his dropout speech in New Orleans means it will likely still focus on poverty, the central plank of his 2008 campaign.

He was also scheduled to speak at the Georgia Democratic Party's Jefferson-Jackson Dinner tonight.

AP: Edwards will drop out

John Edwards will drop out of the presidential race, the AP reports.

The two-time White House candidate notified a close circle of senior advisers that he planned to make the announcement at a 1 p.m. EST event in New Orleans that had been billed as a speech on poverty, according to two of his advisers. The decision came after Edwards lost the four states to hold nominating contests so far to rivals who stole the spotlight from the beginning — Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama. 

Protesters target Dole on housing bill

A small group of protesters targeted U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Dole's Raleigh office today.

Led by the Institute for Southern Studies, 15 protesters said that a Senate committee has held up a bill that would provide housing assistance in New Orleans.

Nana Nantambu, a former resident of New Orleans, said she will not return because of exploitative rents charged by landlords and poor housing stock.

"It is a violation of our human rights," she said.

In the video above, Ajamu Dillahunt with the N.C. Justice Center says he will deliver a letter to Dole asking her to help pass Senate Bill 1668.

"New Orleans needs homes for the holidays," read one sign.

"We don't need a surge in Baghdad, we need a surge in New Orleans."
— Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards, speaking at a town-hall meeting in Tilton, N.H., on Oct. 13, 2007.
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