Author Topic: Obama and Me (play by play of BO's early Illlinois career by a local columnist)  (Read 6029 times)

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Offline Wretched Excess

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FASCINATING.  a lengthy read but worth it.  his early career, how his entire state senate career was meaningless
other than a single year, when he was basically created from whole cloth by the new illinois state senate
majority leader.



Quote
Obama and Me
It was the year 2000, and I was a young, hungry reporter in Chicago with a young, hungry state legislator on my speed dial

It's not quite eight in the morning, and Barack Obama is on the phone screaming at me. He liked the story I wrote about him a couple weeks ago, but not this garbage.

Months earlier, a reporter friend told me she overheard Obama call me an asshole at a political fund-raiser. Now here he is blasting me from hundreds of miles away for a story that just went online but hasn't yet hit local newsstands.

It's the first time I've ever heard him yell, and I'm trembling as I set down the phone. I sit frozen at my desk for several minutes, stunned.

This is before Obama Girl, before the Secret Service detail, before he becomes a best-selling author. His book, Dreams From My Father, has been out of print for years.

I often see Obama smoking cigarettes on brisk Chicago mornings in front of his condominium high-rise along Lake Michigan, or getting his hair buzzed at the corner barbershop on 53rd and Harper in his Hyde Park neighborhood.

This is before he becomes a U.S. senator, before Oprah starts stumping for him, before he positions himself to become the country's first black president.

He is just a rank-and-file state senator in Illinois, and I work for a string of small, scrappy newspapers there.
———

The other day, while stuck in traffic on Houston's Southwest Freeway, I was flipping through right-wing rants on AM radio. Dennis Praeger was railing against Michelle Obama for her clumsy comment on being proud of her country for the first time.

Praeger went on to call her husband a blank slate. There's no record to look at, he complained, unless you lived in Barack Obama's old state Senate district.

Well, I lived and worked in that district for three years—nearly half Obama's tenure in the Illinois Legislature. D-13, the district was called, and it spanned a large swath of Chicago's poor, black, crime-ridden South Side.

It was 2000, and I was a young reporter at the Hyde Park Herald and Lakefront Outlook community newspapers earning $19,000 a year covering politics and crime.

I talked with Obama on a regular basis—a couple times a month, at least. I'd ask him about his campaign finance reports, legislation he was sponsoring and various local issues. He wrote an occasional column published in our papers. It ran with a headshot that made him look about 14 years old.

Spinning through my old Rolodex, I see that I had two cell phone numbers for Obama. Both have since been disconnected.

I also had cell phone numbers for Jesse Jackson; his son, Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr.; and David Axelrod, who now serves as Obama's senior presidential campaign advisor.

Axelrod, too, had begun his journalism career at the Hyde Park Herald before joining the Chicago Tribune as a political reporter, then starting a political consulting firm. Another Hyde Park Herald alum was Seymour Hersh, the legendary investigative reporter who uncovered the My Lai massacre for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and the Abu Ghraib prisoner-abuse scandal for The New Yorker.

My view of Obama then wasn't all that different from the image he projects now. He was smart, confident, charismatic and liberal. One thing I can say is, I never heard him launch into the preacher-man voice he now employs during speeches. He sounded vanilla, and activists in his mostly black district often chided him for it.

I was 25 and had no problem interviewing big-wig politicians, but I always had to steel my nerves when calling Obama. His intelligence was intimidating, and my hands inevitably shook and sweated.

It was serendipity that I ever came to know Obama at all. Looking back, I think of it as a Forrest Gump moment: History was unfolding, and I was at the center of it, clueless. It's a huge bummer to me that I never taped our interviews.

I moved to Chicago from the East Coast after a bad breakup. I had just one year of newspaper experience, working the courts beat for a small Vermont daily.

I picked Chicago because I had friends there. Plus, it was one of the few American cities left with two competing dailies, upping my chances of landing a gig.

I arrived determined to work for one of the big papers. I once spent an entire day dressed up in my only suit and tie—the one I wore to my brother's wedding, where I ripped a hole in the knee while dancing with my niece—and stood, résumé in hand, outside the newsroom at the dumpy old Chicago Sun-Times building.

Columnist Neil Steinberg was gracious enough to accept my folder and even gave me his home number to call later that night. Unimpressed by my clips, Steinberg said most new recruits graduated from top journalism schools such as Northwestern or Columbia—or their mommies or daddies worked at the paper or knew somebody who did.

His advice: To work in Chicago, you have to leave Chicago. Go prove yourself someplace else, kid.

I had a friend at one of the local journalism schools who let me tag along for a school-sponsored tour of the Chicago Tribune building. After the tour, page-two columnist John Kass told us about how he got picked up by the Tribune while in his early 20s after breaking a big story at a little South Side paper.

I spent three months sleeping on a friend's floor on the city's South Side. He was a broke grad student who had earned a mostly free ride at the University of Chicago, working toward a Ph.D. in comparative literature. His studio apartment in Hyde Park was tiny.

We joked that the only way I could stretch my legs at night was to open the oven in the kitchen. It was like the old blues lyric, "I got a gal she's long and tall, sleeps in the kitchen with her feet in the hall."

Obama, who then earned about $50,000 a year as a rookie state senator, lived in a small condo just two blocks away. I had never met or even seen his wife, Michelle, though I'd heard she was employed at University of Chicago Hospitals. Their second daughter, Natasha, had not yet been born.

Every day, I walked past the Hyde Park Herald office, set upstairs from Obama's barbershop. The newspaper box out front said all I needed to know. It was dented, covered in graffiti and broken. The thing ate your two quarters and offered nothing in return.

I didn't want to work there. My aspirations were bigger than that.

Desperate, I finally swallowed my pride, climbed the steep, smelly staircase and submitted my shamefully thin résumé to the receptionist. To my dismay, the editor called later that afternoon with a job offer.
———

Chris Matthews, the MSNBC political pundit, recently grilled Texas state Senator Kirk Watson for supporting Obama despite knowing nothing about the candidate's legislative record.

"Can you name any—can you name anything he's accomplished?" Matthews pressed.

"No," Watson, whose district includes Austin, finally admitted. "I'm not gonna be able to do that."

"Well, that's a problem, isn't it?" Matthews said.

Hillary Clinton recalled the incident with a chuckle during last Thursday's debate at the University of Texas.

When asked about his legislative record, Obama rattles off several bills he sponsored as an Illinois lawmaker.

He expanded children's health insurance, made the state Earned Income Tax Credit refundable for low-income families, required public bodies to tape closed-door meetings to make government more transparent and required police to videotape interrogations of homicide suspects.

And the list goes on.

It's a lengthy record filled with core liberal issues. But what's interesting, and almost never discussed, is that he built his entire legislative record in Illinois in a single year.

Republicans controlled the Illinois General Assembly for six years of Obama's seven-year tenure. Each session, Obama backed legislation that went nowhere; bill after bill died in committee. During those six years, Obama, too, would have had difficulty naming any legislative achievements.

Then, in 2002, dissatisfaction with President Bush and Republicans on the national and local levels led to a Democratic sweep of nearly every level of Illinois state government. For the first time in 26 years, Illinois Democrats controlled the governor's office as well as both legislative chambers.

The white, race-baiting, hard-right Republican Illinois Senate Majority Leader James "Pate" Philip was replaced by Emil Jones Jr., a gravel-voiced, dark-skinned black senator known for chain-smoking cigarettes on the Senate floor.

Jones had served in the Illinois Legislature for three decades. He represented a district on the Chicago South Side not far from Obama's. He became Obama's kingmaker.

Several months before Obama announced his U.S. Senate bid, Jones called his old friend Cliff Kelley, a former Chicago alderman who now hosts the city's most popular black call-in radio program.

I called Kelley last week, and he recollected the private conversation as follows:

"He said, 'Cliff, I'm gonna make me a U.S. senator.'"

"Oh, you are? Who might that be?"

"Barack Obama."

Jones appointed Obama sponsor of virtually every high-profile piece of legislation, angering many rank-and-file state legislators who had more seniority than Obama and had spent years championing the bills.

"I took all the beatings and insults and endured all the racist comments over the years from nasty Republican committee chairmen," state Senator Rickey Hendon, the original sponsor of landmark racial profiling and videotaped confession legislation yanked away by Jones and given to Obama, complained to me at the time. "Barack didn't have to endure any of it, yet, in the end, he got all the credit.

"I don't consider it bill jacking," Hendon told me. "But no one wants to carry the ball 99 yards all the way to the 1-yard line and then give it to the halfback who gets all the credit and the stats in the record book."

During his seventh and final year in the Illinois Senate, Obama's stats soared. He sponsored a whopping 26 bills passed into law—including many he now cites in his presidential campaign when attacked as inexperienced. It was a stunning achievement that started him on the path of national politics, and he couldn't have done it without Jones.

Before Obama ran for U.S. Senate in 2004, he was virtually unknown even in his own state. Polls showed less than 20 percent of Illinois voters had ever heard of Barack Obama.

Jones further helped raise Obama's profile by having him craft legislation addressing the day-to-day tragedies that dominated local news headlines.

For instance, Obama sponsored a bill banning the use of the diet supplement ephedra, which killed a Northwestern University football player, and another one preventing the use of pepper spray or pyrotechnics in nightclubs in the wake of the deaths of 21 people during a stampede at a Chicago nightclub. Both stories had received national attention and extensive local coverage.

I spoke to Jones earlier this week, and he confirmed his conversation with Kelley, adding that he gave Obama the legislation because he believed in Obama's ability to negotiate with Democrats and Republicans on divisive issues.

So how has Obama repaid Jones?

Last June, to prove his commitment to government transparency, Obama released a comprehensive list of his earmark requests for fiscal year 2008. It comprised more than $300 million in pet projects for Illinois, including tens of millions for Jones' Senate district.

Shortly after Jones became Senate president, I remember asking his view on pork-barrel spending.

I'll never forget what he said:

"Some call it pork; I call it steak."

MUCH much more

Offline franksolich

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But Wretched Excess, sir, there's nothing surprising in this.

New, but hardly surprising.
apres moi, le deluge

Milo Yiannopoulos "It has been obvious since 2016 that Trump carries an anointing of some kind. My American friends, are you so blind to reason, and deaf to Heaven? Can he do all this, and cannot get a crown? This man is your King. Coronate him, and watch every devil shriek, and every demon howl."

Offline Wretched Excess

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But Wretched Excess, sir, there's nothing surprising in this.

New, but hardly surprising.

true, but it was the first piece I had read anywhere that even touched on his background in any factual way.  I thought it was fascinating.  I'm sorta disappointed that it isn't getting more traffic.

Offline CactusCarlos

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But Wretched Excess, sir, there's nothing surprising in this.

New, but hardly surprising.

true, but it was the first piece I had read anywhere that even touched on his background in any factual way.  I thought it was fascinating.  I'm sorta disappointed that it isn't getting more traffic.

Say boy, why are you reading the Dallas Observer?  You ain't from 'round here!  :tongue:
"The American people will never knowingly adopt socialism, but under the name of liberalism they will adopt every fragment of the socialist program until one day America will be a socialist nation without ever knowing how it happened."
  -- Norman Thomas, six-time Socialist Party presidential candidate and one of the founders of the ACLU


Offline DixieBelle

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EXCELLENT FIND WE!!!! I'm reading and passing along.

My ex (who is a Republican) actually told me that he thought Barackstar! could "unite both sides" and "get some things done". Oh. My. God. My ex has many faults, political beliefs was never one of them. I couldn't believe that he's thinking along these lines. Of course he admitted that his boss (hello bread and butter!) is a rabid Obama fan. *eyeroll*
I can see November 2 from my house!!!

Spread my work ethic, not my wealth.

Forget change, bring back common sense.
-------------------------------------------------

No, my friends, there’s only one really progressive idea. And that is the idea of legally limiting the power of the government. That one genuinely liberal, genuinely progressive idea — the Why in 1776, the How in 1787 — is what needs to be conserved. We need to conserve that fundamentally liberal idea. That is why we are conservatives. --Bill Whittle

Offline Wretched Excess

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But Wretched Excess, sir, there's nothing surprising in this.

New, but hardly surprising.

true, but it was the first piece I had read anywhere that even touched on his background in any factual way.  I thought it was fascinating.  I'm sorta disappointed that it isn't getting more traffic.

Say boy, why are you reading the Dallas Observer?  You ain't from 'round here!  :tongue:

I don't read it every day.  I came across the link in my new hobby of opposition research on
The BarackStar!


Offline Wretched Excess

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EXCELLENT FIND WE!!!! I'm reading and passing along.

My ex (who is a Republican) actually told me that he thought Barackstar! could "unite both sides" and "get some things done". Oh. My. God. My ex has many faults, political beliefs was never one of them. I couldn't believe that he's thinking along these lines. Of course he admitted that his boss (hello bread and butter!) is a rabid Obama fan. *eyeroll*

thank God someone appreciated it. :-)

Offline CactusCarlos

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I don't read it every day.  I came across the link in my new hobby of opposition research on The BarackStar!

Ah, I see.  For what it's worth, the paper version of The Dallas Observer is a free super-liberal rag you can find in many places around the DFW area (especially downdown Dallas).  It's kinda thick and were well suited for use between the floor and the cat-litter tray. 
"The American people will never knowingly adopt socialism, but under the name of liberalism they will adopt every fragment of the socialist program until one day America will be a socialist nation without ever knowing how it happened."
  -- Norman Thomas, six-time Socialist Party presidential candidate and one of the founders of the ACLU


Offline DixieBelle

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I don't read it every day.  I came across the link in my new hobby of opposition research on The BarackStar!

Ah, I see.  For what it's worth, the paper version of The Dallas Observer is a free super-liberal rag you can find in many places around the DFW area (especially downdown Dallas).  It's kinda thick and were well suited for use between the floor and the cat-litter tray. 
Yes, but I always found it entertaining when I lived there. I would read a copy of it at lunch occasionally. Some of the articles are really good. Liberal slant aside. The Dallas Morning News is great fish wrap too.
I can see November 2 from my house!!!

Spread my work ethic, not my wealth.

Forget change, bring back common sense.
-------------------------------------------------

No, my friends, there’s only one really progressive idea. And that is the idea of legally limiting the power of the government. That one genuinely liberal, genuinely progressive idea — the Why in 1776, the How in 1787 — is what needs to be conserved. We need to conserve that fundamentally liberal idea. That is why we are conservatives. --Bill Whittle

Offline CactusCarlos

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Yes, but I always found it entertaining when I lived there.

You moved "away from" Texas?  Why would anyone "move away"? 
"The American people will never knowingly adopt socialism, but under the name of liberalism they will adopt every fragment of the socialist program until one day America will be a socialist nation without ever knowing how it happened."
  -- Norman Thomas, six-time Socialist Party presidential candidate and one of the founders of the ACLU


Offline Wretched Excess

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I don't read it every day.  I came across the link in my new hobby of opposition research on The BarackStar!

Ah, I see.  For what it's worth, the paper version of The Dallas Observer is a free super-liberal rag you can find in many places around the DFW area (especially downdown Dallas).  It's kinda thick and were well suited for use between the floor and the cat-litter tray. 

interesting.  an ultra liberal rag was launching torpedoes at their new demi-god/hero?  holy sh*t.  this thing really is turning on him.


Offline DixieBelle

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Yes, but I always found it entertaining when I lived there.

You moved "away from" Texas?  Why would anyone "move away"? 

Job relocation. Dammit.
I can see November 2 from my house!!!

Spread my work ethic, not my wealth.

Forget change, bring back common sense.
-------------------------------------------------

No, my friends, there’s only one really progressive idea. And that is the idea of legally limiting the power of the government. That one genuinely liberal, genuinely progressive idea — the Why in 1776, the How in 1787 — is what needs to be conserved. We need to conserve that fundamentally liberal idea. That is why we are conservatives. --Bill Whittle

Offline Wretched Excess

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Yes, but I always found it entertaining when I lived there.

You moved "away from" Texas?  Why would anyone "move away"? 


just off the top of my head . . . .ann richards would have been a decent reason.  the cowboys would have been another one. :-)

Offline DixieBelle

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Yes, but I always found it entertaining when I lived there.

You moved "away from" Texas?  Why would anyone "move away"? 


just off the top of my head . . . .ann richards would have been a decent reason.  the cowboys would have been another one. :-)
:hammer: :rotf: I still wear my Cowboys stuff here in D.C. - I'm brave.
I can see November 2 from my house!!!

Spread my work ethic, not my wealth.

Forget change, bring back common sense.
-------------------------------------------------

No, my friends, there’s only one really progressive idea. And that is the idea of legally limiting the power of the government. That one genuinely liberal, genuinely progressive idea — the Why in 1776, the How in 1787 — is what needs to be conserved. We need to conserve that fundamentally liberal idea. That is why we are conservatives. --Bill Whittle

Offline Wretched Excess

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Yes, but I always found it entertaining when I lived there.

You moved "away from" Texas?  Why would anyone "move away"? 


just off the top of my head . . . .ann richards would have been a decent reason.  the cowboys would have been another one. :-)
:hammer: :rotf: I still wear my Cowboys stuff here in D.C. - I'm brave.

considering the rivalry with the 'skins, you are very brave. :wink:

Offline Lord Undies

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I don't read it every day.  I came across the link in my new hobby of opposition research on The BarackStar!

Ah, I see.  For what it's worth, the paper version of The Dallas Observer is a free super-liberal rag you can find in many places around the DFW area (especially downdown Dallas).  It's kinda thick and were well suited for use between the floor and the cat-litter tray. 

interesting.  an ultra liberal rag was launching torpedoes at their new demi-god/hero?  holy sh*t.  this thing really is turning on him.



The Dallas Observer is a liberal rag.  Sometimes....maybe once in a second blue moon...they actually have an article worth the time to read.  Mostly, it is very popular with the Oak Lawn crowd (gay!).  You can find anything you want in the personal ads in the back.  We use to read them out loud during lunch at an office I was stationed at.  "Humpback whale looking for the right harpoon.  Email address for fabric swatches".  

Offline DixieBelle

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I don't read it every day.  I came across the link in my new hobby of opposition research on The BarackStar!

Ah, I see.  For what it's worth, the paper version of The Dallas Observer is a free super-liberal rag you can find in many places around the DFW area (especially downdown Dallas).  It's kinda thick and were well suited for use between the floor and the cat-litter tray. 

interesting.  an ultra liberal rag was launching torpedoes at their new demi-god/hero?  holy sh*t.  this thing really is turning on him.



The Dallas Observer is a liberal rag.  Sometimes....maybe once in a second blue moon...they actually have an article worth the time to read.  Mostly, it is very popular with the Oak Lawn crowd (gay!).  You can find anything you want in the personal ads in the back.  We use to read them out loud during lunch at an office I was stationed at.  "Humpback whale looking for the right harpoon.  Email address for fabric swatches".  
:rotf:
That's pretty darn accurate. I had to have a gay co-worker de-code some of those cryptic ads for me. Some things you wish you could un-know!  :-)
I can see November 2 from my house!!!

Spread my work ethic, not my wealth.

Forget change, bring back common sense.
-------------------------------------------------

No, my friends, there’s only one really progressive idea. And that is the idea of legally limiting the power of the government. That one genuinely liberal, genuinely progressive idea — the Why in 1776, the How in 1787 — is what needs to be conserved. We need to conserve that fundamentally liberal idea. That is why we are conservatives. --Bill Whittle

Offline Wretched Excess

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I don't read it every day.  I came across the link in my new hobby of opposition research on The BarackStar!

Ah, I see.  For what it's worth, the paper version of The Dallas Observer is a free super-liberal rag you can find in many places around the DFW area (especially downdown Dallas).  It's kinda thick and were well suited for use between the floor and the cat-litter tray. 

interesting.  an ultra liberal rag was launching torpedoes at their new demi-god/hero?  holy sh*t.  this thing really is turning on him.



The Dallas Observer is a liberal rag.  Sometimes....maybe once in a second blue moon...they actually have an article worth the time to read.  Mostly, it is very popular with the Oak Lawn crowd (gay!).  You can find anything you want in the personal ads in the back.  We use to read them out loud during lunch at an office I was stationed at.  "Humpback whale looking for the right harpoon.  Email address for fabric swatches". 

that may explain the anti-obama rhetoric.  the gay rights lobby (or perhaps it is just the DU faction of the gay rights lobby) still has their panties in a wad over the McClurkin thing.

Offline Lord Undies

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I don't read it every day.  I came across the link in my new hobby of opposition research on The BarackStar!

Ah, I see.  For what it's worth, the paper version of The Dallas Observer is a free super-liberal rag you can find in many places around the DFW area (especially downdown Dallas).  It's kinda thick and were well suited for use between the floor and the cat-litter tray. 

interesting.  an ultra liberal rag was launching torpedoes at their new demi-god/hero?  holy sh*t.  this thing really is turning on him.



The Dallas Observer is a liberal rag.  Sometimes....maybe once in a second blue moon...they actually have an article worth the time to read.  Mostly, it is very popular with the Oak Lawn crowd (gay!).  You can find anything you want in the personal ads in the back.  We use to read them out loud during lunch at an office I was stationed at.  "Humpback whale looking for the right harpoon.  Email address for fabric swatches". 

that may explain the anti-obama rhetoric.  the gay rights lobby (or perhaps it is just the DU faction of the gay rights lobby) still has their panties in a wad over the McClurkin thing.

I was going to end with that thought before I got distracted by some eyeball floaters in new shapes I haven't seen before. 

Barack Eugene Obama, relying on his negroid characteristics, isn't going to buy two cents worth of the gay crowd's enthusiasm as long as one of their true daughters is in the race.