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March 12, 2004

Barack Obama for U.S. Senate

By Byron LaMasters

This guy is amazing.

Barack Obama. No, not Osama. Or Iraq. He's a candidate for U.S. Senate in Illinois, and I've been impressed with him ever since I learned about him several months ago. He's a terrific candidate in a state that has shown that it has the ability to elect African-Americans to statewide office on a consistent basis. Obama is such a great candidate. He's an Illinois State Senator, a civil rights attorney and is squeaky clean ethically (in sometimes ethically challenged Illinois politics).

Learn more about him at his official website or check out what the Washington Post has to say:


Organization men are a staple of Illinois politics, of course, and investment bankers seem poised to take over the Senate in our plutocratic age. Obama, by contrast, is a candidate who all but defies categorization -- and who would certainly mark a radical departure for the stodgy Senate. If elected (and Illinois is a Democratic state becoming steadily more so), he would become the Senate's sole black member and just the third African American senator since Reconstruction, following Massachusetts Republican Edward Brooke and fellow Illinois Democrat Carol Moseley Braun, who only narrowly lost her seat to Republican Fitzgerald in 1998 despite a string of scandals.

But that scarcely begins to describe the distinctiveness of Obama. His father was Kenyan, his mother a white girl from Kansas. The two met and married at the University of Hawaii in 1960 (when miscegenation was still a felony in more than half the states). His father disappeared from his life when Obama was 2; his mother raised him in Hawaii and Indonesia. Obama went to college at Columbia, then moved to Chicago for five years of community organizing in a fusion of civil rights crusading and Saul Alinsky house-to-house plodding. He then went to Harvard Law School, where he became the first black president of the Law Review; returned to Chicago to run a program that registered 100,000 voters in the '92 elections, entered a civil rights law firm and became a senior lecturer in constitutional law at the University of Chicago. (If elected, Obama would be the second liberal Hyde Park academic to represent Illinois in the Senate; New Deal economist Paul Douglas was the first.)

Seven years ago Obama was elected to the state Senate from a district in Chicago's South Side. In Springfield, he developed a reputation as an impassioned progressive who was able to get support on both sides of the aisle. One of his bills created a state earned-income tax credit that has brought more than $100 million to Illinois's working-poor families. Another, conceived in the wake of revelations about innocent men the state had wrongly executed, mandated the videotaping of police interrogations of suspects in capital crimes. There followed "tortuous negotiations with state's attorneys and death-penalty abolitionists," Obama recalls, but in the end the bill passed unanimously.

In October 2002, Obama made an eloquent case against the impending war in Iraq at a rally in downtown Chicago. Declaring repeatedly that "I don't oppose all wars," he distinguished what he termed "a dumb war, a rash war" from a string of just and necessary wars in which the United States had engaged. He is surely the progressives' darling in the field, drawing enthusiastic support from white Lake Shore liberals as well as the African American community. But he's also won the endorsements of virtually all the state's major papers, many of which -- such as Chicago's Tribune and Sun-Times -- note their disagreement with him on the war but hail him as a brilliant public servant nonetheless. Should Obama win, says Rep. Jan Schakowsky of Evanston, who backs his candidacy, he'd "march right onto the national stage and the international stage."

While practicing law in the early 1990s, Obama wrote "Dreams From My Father," a memoir and meditation of genuine literary merit that depicts his understandable quest for his identity -- a quest that immersed him in the world of Chicago's poor and that took him to a Kenyan village in search of a father he never knew. It's a story of worlds colliding, fusing and redividing, of a life devoted to re-creating in a grittier world the idealism and sense of community of the early civil rights movement, which provided the backdrop for his parents' marriage.

If by "American" we mean that which is most distinctive about us and our ideals, if we mean it to refer to our status as a nation of immigrants that could yet become the world's first great polyglot, miscegenistic meritocracy, then Barack Obama, if elected, would not only become the sole African American in the Senate: He would also be the most distinctly American of its members.


I'm sold. This guy leads 44% to 20% to 18% over Blair and Hynes in a recent Survey USA poll. Donate to his campaign. We have a opportunity to elect a progressive African-American Democrat to the U.S. Senate in Illinois, and Barack Obama is the perfect candidate. The election is next Tuesday, March 16th.


Posted by Byron LaMasters at March 12, 2004 12:25 AM | TrackBack

Comments

I swear, Byron, I'm putting you in my will. Thank you so very much for this introduction. If I am ever given the opportunity to meet this man, I'm going to mention you. When I see the future, I am so encouraged. Thank you, sugah. You're a real dear.

Posted by: Houston at March 12, 2004 10:48 PM

Barack Obama is the natural successor to the late Paul Simon. While neither was born in Illinois, both embraced the state with such enthusiasm that it's easy to forget they grew up in the Pacific rim.
Both Simon and Obama made names for themselves in the state senate and used it as a launch pad for higher office.

Obama, like Simon, is an intellectual and makes no apologies for it. But both men have been blessed with the common touch and never permitted themselves to remain cloistered in ivory towers.

They could both be thought of as progressive populists. While highly principled, neither has considered himself to be "above politics". They've been known to kick butt when the situation demanded it.

It is rare that history is so seamless. But the passing of Paul Simon and the rise of Barack Obama in a matter of weeks, makes me think of that JFK phrase, "the torch has been passed."

If there are any other Illinois voters out there, please join me on Tuesday in casting a vote for hope.

----------------------------------------
BTW, I hope that Houston gives me a cut from that will too.
*inside joke*

Posted by: Tim Z at March 12, 2004 11:58 PM

When is the Illinois primary? Isn't this going to be an open seat? If so, I assume we are going to pick it up.

Posted by: WhoMe? at March 13, 2004 08:26 AM

It's a GOP open seat (Pete Fitzgerald decided not to run again because saw the writing on the wall) and it is pretty much the one sure pickup the Dems have this year (though Colorado, with all GOP heavyweights declining to face Salazar, may also become a sure thing). Illinois has become a solidly Democratic state and the state GOP is still suffering from the wreckage George Ryan left behind. Their top Senate candidate is ANOTHER Ryan, this one named Jack whose main claim to fame is being the ex-husband of former "Star Trek" and "Boston Public" hottie Jeri Ryan. Ryan's little more than a sacrificial lamb. Basically whoever wins the Dem primary is likely the next Senator.

I like Obama too. He seems like one hell of a candidate and I want to see an African-American face back in the Senate. He's very smart and ethically-straight (something Carol Mosely-Braun had trouble with, about the only reason she narrowly lost to Fitzgerald in 1998). He'll make a great Senator, perhaps turning out to be an heir to Paul Wellstone (both were college professors).

Posted by: gfyfe at March 13, 2004 11:56 AM


The primary is this Tuesday, March 16th.
Polls are open in IL from 6 AM to 7 PM.
I'll be working as an election judge in suburban Cook County for the primary. So I'll be casting an absentee ballot within the hour for Obama.
This is the Dems best chance for a pick up in 2004.
=)

He'll make a great Senator, perhaps turning out to be an heir to Paul Wellstone

Wellstone was indeed a great senator. But Obama, like the late Sen Paul Simon (see above), is more of a pragmatist. That's an essential trait for success in Illinois politics.

Posted by: Tim Z at March 13, 2004 12:23 PM

The Illinoisians I know are fired up about Obama, and it's showing in the polls. He's gonna be an absolutely fantastic Senator.

Posted by: Brady at March 13, 2004 08:56 PM

I've actually met Obama on several occasions. He is even more impressive in person than the press coverage--magnetic, well-spoken, smart, straight-forward, no nonsense, no bulls---. As my friend who just made her first political contribution ever said of him "he's the only politician EVER who does not make my skin crawl." He was my state senator in Chicago and I voted for him in his run for congress against the ineffectual Bobby Rush. It makes me wish I still lived in Illinois, just so I could vote for him again. This is a bright shining moment for the country as a whole, a great hope for ethical, principled, and progressive leadership.

Posted by: kajey at March 15, 2004 12:47 PM
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