palmer.htm
Chicago Sun-Times—A close examination of Obama’s first campaign
clouds the image he has cultivated throughout his political career: Obama, who
runs on a message of giving a voice to the voiceless, first entered public
office not by leveling the playing field, but by clearing it. Alice Palmer,
friend and mentor to Obama, served the district in the Illinois Senate for much
of the 1990s. Decades earlier, she was a community organizer in the area when
Obama was growing up in Hawaii. She risked her safe seat to run for Congress and
touted Obama as a suitable successor. But when Palmer lost the congressional
race, her supporters asked Obama to fold his campaign so she could easily retain
her state Senate seat. Obama not only refused to step aside for the woman who
was his friend and had recommended him for the seat, he filed challenges that
nullified Palmer’s hastily gathered nominating petitions, forcing her to
withdraw.
http://tinyurl.com/2zwwte
Black Activist Alice Palmer Trusted Barack Obama
In 1995, Alice Palmer was a longtime Black activist, a “beloved
elder stateswoman” in the Illinois state senate. She had a long record of
community organizing and had earned a ’safe seat’ — ie, no one even tried
to run against her. She was doing excellent work for the Black activist
community, and holding that seat securely for them, so they could spend their
resources elsewhere.
Barack Obama had never run for office. He was a 32-year-old wannabee hanging
around the Chicago political machine, hoping for someone to give him a
boost.
Palmer had a chance to run in a special election for a higher office. Obama was
young, with an inspiring manner and an innocent grin. Palmer trusted him.
She introduced him to party elders and donors as her probable successor, and
helped him gather signatures to get on the ballot. She didn’t get any
agreement with him in writing. She trusted him.
Then Palmer’s higher race went poorly. To get on the ballot for her old seat,
she also gathered signatures, all under the 1995 list of registered voters —
hastily, collecting only the minimum number of signatures needed. When she and
party elders asked Obama to withdraw, offering him help in getting an additional
post elsewhere, Obama refused. So Palmer prepared to let the voters decide
between them.
But instead of letting the voters decide, Obama got Palmer (as well as the rest
of his opponents) knocked off the ballot for her own seat. As soon as a 1996
list of registered voters was completed which purged over 15,000 voters from the
registered list, he challenged all his opponents' signatures against the purged
list. Since some voters had moved or died, not enough matches could be found. (Obama’s
own signatures were never put to the same test.)
So Obama charged Palmer with ‘fraud’, had her disgraced and knocked out of
politics — rather than run a fair campaign against her.
Running as the only name on the ballot, Obama took Palmer’s safe seat. Soon he
abandoned it for an unsuccessful higher office run himself. So instead of Palmer
in her safe seat and Obama in another seat, their party had lost them both.
Palmer made some mistakes, but she is not running for President of the US on a
claim of judgement and unity and courtesy, as Obama claims to be. Palmer’s
mistakes came from innocent optomism — and trusting Barack Obama.