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Monday, April 16, 2007 2:15 p.m. EDT

John Edwards: I Can 'Win Some Southern States'

Presidential candidate John Edwards said Monday that he is the strongest general election candidate in the Democratic field because he's won in the South and his chief rivals have not been tested there.

Edwards said that's true of Democratic primary opponents Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York and Barack Obama of Illinois, but it also applies to the leading Republican candidates - former New York city Mayor Rudy Giuliani, Arizona Sen. John McCain and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

"I think I have the strongest chance of changing the electoral map," Edwards said in an interview with The Associated Press. "If Senator McCain or Mayor Giuliani or Governor Romney, if one of them is the nominee, I think we have a great chance to win, not just Ohio, but to win some Southern states.

"I think in the case of most of the other (Democratic) candidates, they're just not tested, not at all," said the former North Carolina senator.

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  President Bush swept the Southeast states in 2004, even though Edwards was the 2004 vice presidential nominee and campaigned in the South. Asked how he could improve that record next year, Edwards responded: "Be the nominee." He declined to talk about why Democratic nominee John Kerry specifically wasn't successful.

"I think that it's very frustrating to people like me, but President Bush was a strong Southern candidate," Edwards said. "And when you look at the candidates that the Republicans have in 2008, it's certainly less so among at least the three top contenders."

Edwards was using his Southern roots to distinguish himself in a tough primary competition with Clinton and Obama, who are getting more attention in the race but face questions about whether they could appeal nationwide. He visited his birthplace in Seneca, S.C., on Monday then flew to Nashville where he lived after graduating law school for a bluegrass concert at the former home of the Grand Ole Opry.

Edwards was raised in North Carolina and represented the state for one term in the Senate. He said it's not a coincidence that the last three Democratic presidents - Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter and Lyndon Johnson - were from the South and could make a "cultural connection" with voters there.

"The voters of the South have to think that you understand their lives," he said in his North Carolina drawl during a flight between South Carolina and Tennessee. "Some of it is the way you talk about issues, obviously it helps if you have a Southern accent. If you're like me and you grew up going to and playing Friday night football, going to church on Sunday morning and Sunday night and Wednesday night, then they feel a connection to that. They understand it.

Edwards announced a plan to boost rural economies, adding the six-page Rural Recovery Act to his growing list of liberal policy proposals, which also includes a withdrawal of forces from Iraq, universal health care and a repeal of some of President Bush's tax cuts to pay for it.

Some of his positions put him to the left of Southern conservative voters, so Edwards was trying to woo them by focusing on his common roots and promising to make rural America a priority.

Upon arrival in Nashville, Edwards learned about a morning shooting at Virginia Tech University that led to the deaths of 22 people, including the gunman. He continued to a news conference at the Nashville Farmers Market, and opened by offering his prayers for those killed. "God bless them, and it's a terrible tragedy in America," he said.

Edwards supports gun control measures such as background checks at gun shows, but made sure to stress his support of gun ownership rights in his rural America plan. In the interview with the AP, Edwards said he grew up hunting deer, rabbits and birds, but doesn't hunt any longer. "I think it's important for us to respect the right to own firearms and to use them for protection," he said. "I don't think, though, that it means anybody needs an AK-47 to hunt."

© 2007 Associated Press.

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