Friday, May 30, 2008
"New Politics": Rhetoric vs Reality
Here's one passage from an article on CNN.com about Obama's first run for office:
Power to the people? Count every vote?
Or "People's Republic of Chicago"?
We report. You decide.
In his first race for office, seeking a state Senate seat on Chicago's gritty South Side in 1996, Obama effectively used election rules to eliminate his Democratic competition.
As a community organizer, he had helped register thousands of voters. But when it came time to run for office, he employed Chicago rules to invalidate the voting petition signatures of three of his challengers.
The move denied each of them, including incumbent Alice Palmer, a longtime Chicago activist, a place on the ballot. It cleared the way for Obama to run unopposed on the Democratic ticket in a heavily Democrat district.
"That was Chicago politics," said John Kass, a veteran Chicago Tribune columnist. "Knock out your opposition, challenge their petitions, destroy your enemy, right? It is how Barack Obama destroyed his enemies back in 1996 that conflicts with his message today. He may have gotten his start registering thousands of voters. But in that first race, he made sure voters had just one choice."
Obama's challenge was perfectly legal, said Jay Stewart of the Chicago's Better Government Association. Although records of the challenges are no longer on file for review with the election board, Stewart said Obama is not the only politician to resort to petition challenges to eliminate the competition.
Power to the people? Count every vote?
Or "People's Republic of Chicago"?
We report. You decide.
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1 comments:
BTW, could msnbc be in the bag for obama any more blatantly? Besides the highly-publicized comments by chris matthews, msnbc.com has now been running a headline for THREE DAYS on multiracial America. Fine story, shows the melting pot. But 3 days? Really? Will they run 3 days of growing up in veterans' families, in subtle support of McCain? Doubt it.