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Barack Obama: Harvard Attorney


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xico's Avatar
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04-Aug-2004, 07:32 PM #1
Barack Obama: Harvard Attorney
Illinois Senate candidate Barack Obama's got green cred

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by Amanda Griscom

04 Aug 2004

Barack Obama.
Photo: David Katz/Obama for Illinois.

As if America needs one more reason to fall in love with Barack Obama.

Beyond the unabashed idealism, stirring oratory skills, touching life story, and knee-buckling smile that have made this candidate for Illinois' open Senate seat the new beau ideal of progressive politics, it so happens that this guy is a bona fide, card-carrying, bleeding-heart greenie.

And it's not as though Muckraker didn't rifle through his environmental record going back more than a decade to try to find something off-kilter -- some skeleton in the closet, some flaw to make him a mere mortal. But all we found were accolades and evidence of true conviction.

Obama's comments at the League of Conservation Voters' pro-Kerry rally last week -- made only hours before he delivered the convention speech that catapulted him onto the national stage and elicited comparisons to Martin Luther King Jr. and John F. Kennedy -- brought enviros to their knees.

"Environmentalism is not an upper-income issue, it's not a white issue, it's not a black issue, it's not a South or a North or an East or a West issue. It's an issue that all of us have a stake in," Obama shouted. "And if I can do anything to make sure that not just my daughter but every child in America has green pastures to run in and clean air to breathe and clean water to swim in, then that is something I'm going to work my hardest to make happen."


Stirring up the convention crowd.
Photo: David Katz/Obama for Illinois.

The crowd went bananas in response to this call for unity across ethnic and socio-economic lines, as though they'd been waiting for exactly this kind of dynamic leader to free environmentalism from the perception that it's predominately a white upper-middle-class issue.

Obama's environmental activism stretches back to his undergrad days at Columbia University, during which he did a three-month stint with a Ralph Nader offshoot organization trying to convince minority students at City College in Harlem to recycle. Later, when he worked as a community organizer on the South Side of Chicago, he fought for lead abatement in the Altgeld Gardens neighborhood.

After getting a law degree from Harvard, Obama became a civil-rights lawyer and then in 1996 was elected to the Illinois state senate, representing the 13th district on Chicago's South Side, where he distinguished himself as a leader on environmental and public-health issues. In 2003, Obama was one of six state senators to receive a 100 Percent Environmental Voting Record Award from the Illinois Environmental Council.

His efforts on behalf of the environment have been so consistent and comprehensive, in fact, that LCV and the Sierra Club endorsed Obama in his bid for Congress this year over half a dozen other Democrats competing in the primary. Last month, the LCV named him a 2004 Environmental Champion, one of 18 sitting and prospective members of Congress to receive the award.

Obama is "by far one of the most compelling and knowledgeable politicians on the environment I've ever sat in a room with," Mark Longabaugh, senior vice president for political affairs at LCV, told Muckraker. "I've been playing national politics for more than 20 years and I quite literally can't remember one person I've met -- even on a national level -- who was more in command of facts, more eloquent, and more passionate on these issues than Sen. Obama."

Obama's commitment to environmental protection has a personal component: His six-year-old daughter, Malia, has chronic asthma, a fact he often cites when defending the long list of initiatives he has pushed to clean up smog and air pollution in his state. And many of his constituents suffer from the same condition. "More people die from asthma attacks in Chicago than anywhere else in the country," said Brian Urbaszewski, director of environmental health programs for the American Lung Association of Metropolitan Chicago. "And Illinois has the highest African-American death rate from asthma in the country -- four times the national average."

This year, Obama made an aggressive move to stem the tide of pollution from Illinois' coal plants -- which produce nearly 50 percent of the state's electricity -- by introducing a bill that would in effect block the Bush administration's rollback of the Clean Air Act's new-source review rules from being carried out in his state. "This is a very complex issue, but Obama took it by storm," Urbaszewski told Muckraker. "He dove headfirst into all the complexities and wouldn't quit until he had a solution."

According to Jack Darin, who, as director of the Sierra Club's Illinois chapter, has worked with Obama closely on these issues, "He's an incredibly quick study. He's not a scientist, but remarkably adept at analyzing the details of complex environmental issues, asking the right details, and ultimately making the right policy decision for public interest."


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To build support for cleaner air, Obama opened a dialogue with the coal-mining industry about how better pollution controls on power plants could help create new markets for Illinois coal. Most of the coal now being burned in Illinois comes from Wyoming and other Western states, which has hurt the Illinois coal industry. But Illinois coal is cleaner in terms of pollutants such as mercury. Obama argued that cracking down on mercury pollution from coal-fired plants would give Illinois coal a competitive advantage over Western coal.

"Most politicians have forever played the interests of the coal industry and the environment against each other," said Darin, "but Obama found a way to argue soundly that we can put mine workers back to work while making the air cleaner."


Stumping for a saner energy plan.
Photo: David Katz/Obama for Illinois.

Obama has taken on energy matters in Illinois as aggressively as air-quality protection. As state senator, he is cosponsoring a pending measure that would require 10 percent of the electricity generated in the state to come from renewable sources by 2012, and he supports another pending bill that would tighten energy-efficiency codes in residential and commercial buildings.

And Obama is making energy independence one of the top three priorities in his campaign for a seat in the U.S. Senate, according to his spokesperson, Robert Gibbs. He has pledged to endorse legislation that would require 20 percent of America's power supply to be generated by renewable sources by 2020, as well as regulations that would boost Corporate Average Fuel Economy standards to 40 miles per gallon for cars.

The list doesn't stop there. Obama has fought for tougher standards on diesel engines, waged battles against urban sprawl and the destruction of Illinois' wetlands, and mobilized residents in Chicago's lowest-income neighborhoods to block toxic dumping in their communities.

It's particularly notable that Obama has gone out on a political limb to advance environmental protections. "Illinois is a heavily industrial state, and a tough place for environmentalists and other progressives," said Darin. "Illinois is a state that has no limits on campaign financing, meaning the special interests are well entrenched." But Obama has never capitulated, said Darin, and for most of his time in the state senate, he has been in the minority, arguing against the political grain with surprising success.

Nothing could better prepare him for the current scene in Washington, D.C.

Muck it up: We welcome rumors, whistleblowing, classified documents, or other useful tips on environmental policies, Beltway shenanigans, and the people behind them. Please send 'em to muckraker@gristmagazine.com.

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04-Aug-2004, 10:47 PM #2
THis need to deify this man says more about the desperation in the democratic party among progressives for a voice.
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05-Aug-2004, 03:16 PM #3
Quote:
Originally Posted by sligo
THis need to deify this man says more about the desperation in the democratic party among progressives for a voice.
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05-Aug-2004, 06:59 PM #4
Quote:
Originally Posted by sligo
THis need to deify this man says more about the desperation in the democratic party among progressives for a voice.
while there has been lots of airy praise for obama, there has also been the opening salvos of the "where are those programs of his that back up all the rhetoric?" attacks.....

the cool thing about this article is that it shows obama to be more than an eloquent speaker and an idealist...he is willing to fight for what he believes...against business, against government....

you may label them all "progressives"...and the majority in america may wear that suit.....but its a big planet, and there are growing numbers of the desperate, sick of politics and business running the show
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"When we face the empire, we face ourselves...to survive, it is imperative that we cease to lie to ourselves about our condition." -Phil Rockstroh

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05-Aug-2004, 07:17 PM #5
Please--listen to the man in the street react to his speech--Dont get me wrong--he seems like a talented guy. I was only trying to point out that the democratic party can't win an election with a progressive platform---this country is to conservative.
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05-Aug-2004, 07:30 PM #6
gotcha

and sadly, you speak the truth
and sadder still, the 'crats understand it, too....they chose kerry

i'd rather go down in flames trying than suffocate in a smoke filled room
xico's Avatar
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06-Aug-2004, 10:44 AM #7
Quote:
i'd rather go down in flames trying than suffocate in a smoke filled room
Iltos, you just may be given the opportunity to achieve your fantasies! Unfortunately, the rest of us will probably "suffocate in a smoke filled room"
cos we are still looking into Pandora's Box.
xico's Avatar
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14-Aug-2004, 04:19 PM #8
http://www.buzzflash.com/premiums/04/08/pre04037.html

BuzzFlash regrets it hasn't read Barack Obama's memoirs first published in 1995 and just reprinted as a paperback. Being located in Chicago and running into Obama on a variety of occasions, friends had told us that his memoir was well worth reading.

But we put it off until another day. "This isn't just another political hack job," our friend told us. "Trust me, it's the real thing."

And so it appears that our friend was correct, and that is why Crown Books is coming out with a reprint in paperback.

The Chicago Tribune recently noted that Obama, the rising star of the Democratic Party and scintillating keynote speaker at the Democratic Convention, is quite the writer.

Take this passage about the anguish of being biracial from "Dreams of My Father":

"Privately they guess at my troubled heart, I suppose -- the mixed blood, the divided soul, the ghostly image of the tragic mulatto trapped between two worlds. ...

...And if I were to explain that, no, the tragedy is not mine, or at least not mine alone, it is yours, sons and daughters of Plymouth Rock and Ellis Island, it is yours, children of Africa, it is the tragedy of both my wife's six-year-old cousin and his white first grade classmates, so that you need not guess at what troubles me, it's on the nightly news for all to see, and that if we could acknowledge at least that much then the tragic cycle begins to break down."

Perhaps Barack Obama is so inspirational to so many in that he symbolizes the promise of America to embrace persons of all backgrounds and to believe that each individual, regardless of economic or peerage pedigree, can contribute to the common good.

A review in the Washington Post (the Tribune notes) praises the prose of the next United States Senator from Illinois: " "Fluidly, calmly, insightfully, Obama guides us straight to the intersection of the most serious questions of identity, class and race."

When Barack Obama was a state senator who represented the thoughtful, progressive wing of the Democratic Party in Illinois, we didn't have time to read his memoir. Now, we won't put it down for the world.

http://www.buzzflash.com/premiums/04/08/pre04037.html
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14-Aug-2004, 04:24 PM #9
xico - I surmise you survived Charlie with all intact?
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