Showing his bare knuckles
The day after New Year's 1996, operatives for Barack Obama filed into a
barren hearing room of the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners.
There they began the tedious process of challenging hundreds of signatures
on the nominating petitions of state Sen. Alice Palmer, the longtime
progressive activist from the city's South Side. And they kept challenging
petitions until every one of Obama's four Democratic primary rivals was forced
off the ballot.
Fresh from his work as a civil rights lawyer and head of a voter
registration project that expanded access to the ballot box, Obama launched
his first campaign for the Illinois Senate saying he wanted to empower
disenfranchised citizens.
But in that initial bid for political office, Obama quickly mastered the
bare-knuckle arts of Chicago electoral politics. His overwhelming legal
onslaught signaled his impatience to gain office, even if that meant elbowing
aside an elder stateswoman like Palmer.
A close examination of Obama's first campaign puts a hard edge on the
image he has honed throughout his political career: The man now running for
president on a message of giving a voice to the voiceless first entered public
office not by leveling the playing field, but by clearing it.
One of the candidates he eliminated, long-shot contender Gha-is Askia, now
says that Obama's petition challenges belied his image as a champion of the
little guy and crusader for voter rights.
"Why say you're for a new tomorrow, then do old-style Chicago politics to
remove legitimate candidates?" Askia said. "He talks about honor and
democracy, but what honor is there in getting rid of every other candidate so
you can run scot-free? Why not let the people decide?"
In a recent interview, Obama granted that "there's a legitimate argument to
be made that you shouldn't create barriers to people getting on the ballot."
But the unsparing legal tactics were justified, he said, by obvious flaws
in his opponents' signature sheets. "To my mind, we were just abiding by the
rules that had been set up," Obama recalled.
"I gave some thought to ... should people be on the ballot even if they
didn't meet the requirements," he said. "My conclusion was that if you
couldn't run a successful petition drive, then that raised questions in terms
of how effective a representative you were going to be."
Asked whether the district's primary voters were well-served by having
only one candidate, Obama smiled and said: "I think they ended up with a very
good state senator."
Obama behind challenges
America has been defined in part by civil rights and good government
battles fought out in Chicago's 13th District, which in 1996 spanned Hyde
Park mansions, South Shore bungalows and poverty-bitten precincts of
Englewood.
It was in this part of the city that an eager reform Democrat by the name
of Abner Mikva first entered elected office in the 1950s. And here a young,
brash minister named Jesse Jackson ran Operation Breadbasket, leading
marchers who sought to pressure grocery chains to hire minorities.
Palmer served the district in the Illinois Senate for much of the 1990s.
Decades earlier, she was working as a community organizer in the area when
Obama was growing up in Hawaii and Indonesia. She risked her safe seat to run
for Congress and touted Obama as a suitable successor, according to news
accounts and interviews.
But when Palmer got clobbered in that November 1995 special 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, he filed challenges that nullified
Palmer's hastily gathered nominating petitions, forcing her to withdraw.
"I liked Alice Palmer a lot. I thought she was a good public servant,"
Obama said. "It was very awkward. That part of it I wish had played out
entirely differently."
His choice divided veteran Chicago political activists.
"There was friction about the decision he made," said City Colleges of
Chicago professor emeritus Timuel Black, who tried to negotiate with Obama
on Palmer's behalf. "There were deep disagreements."
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