From Deseret News archives:

Kerry gets Demo nod

Utah delegates give him 28 votes, join in praising Edwards

Published: Thursday, July 29, 2004 6:46 a.m. MDT
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"I think he's wonderful," said Gina Wickwar, an Edwards delegate from Logan. "He's so telegenic. That's a nice way to say handsome. And he's a wonderful speaker."

Edwards praised Kerry Wednesday night as a man tested by war for national command and promised convention delegates that their ticket will "build one America" no longer divided by income or race.

Republicans are "doing all they can to take this campaign for the highest office in the land down the lowest possible road," Kerry's running mate told a nationwide prime-time television audience.

The vice presidential candidate urged the country to reject that approach and "embrace the politics of hope, the politics of what's possible because this is America, where everything is possible."

Edwards' appearance on the podium prompted the most boisterous demonstration of the convention to date. Thousands of cheering delegates held aloft identical red signs bearing his name, passed out by the box load just before he stepped to the podium.

He evoked the themes of his campaign against Kerry in last winter's primaries to argue the case for their new political partnership.

"The truth is, we still live in two different Americas," said Edwards, the son of a Carolina mill worker and the first in his family to attend college.

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Edwards' turn at the podium came a few hours after Kerry campaigned his way to the convention city and into the eager embrace of his Vietnam War crewmates. A dozen fellow veterans greeted him, including Jim Rassmann, a retired Special Forces soldier whose life Kerry saved from a muddy river in the Mekong Delta while under enemy fire.

"We're going to write the next great chapter of history in this country together," Kerry vowed at a welcome-home rally in the city that has nourished his political career for a quarter century.

In keeping with the overwhelming security arrangements for the first national political convention since the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Kerry's ferry was escorted by Coast Guard vessels armed with machine guns as it made the brief trip across the open harbor.

Utah's youngest delegate, 18-year-old Sarah Mulhern, liked Edwards' "positive message. He's had a lot to say about youth." Mulhern said her original choice "is going to be a fabulous vice president, and he has a fabulous president to serve under."

She was even more excited to cast only her second vote ever. The first was for Edwards in Utah's presidential primary in February and the second was as a delegate Wednesday.

"It's thrilling to be part of historical event, of nominating the next president," Mulhern said.

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Laura Rauch, Associated Press

Sen. John Kerry, the Democratic presidential candidate, celebrates Wednesday as he arrives at the Charlestown Navy Yard in Boston.

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