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Obama's tactics
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À
10/06/2009 11:06:41
Information générale
Forum:
Politics
Catégorie:
Autre
Titre:
Divers
Thread ID:
01404964
Message ID:
01404979
Vues:
69
>Mike, I made reference to Obama's tactics, and you asked for some specifics. I decided to start a new thread.
>
>Obama has a history of not just trying to defeat his opposition (the goal), but clearing the field of opposition.
>
>One dirty handed tactic he used was to challenge the legality of some of the signatures that his opponent used on her nominating petitions to run in the Democrat primary against Obama, when Obama first ran for the Illinois House. This woman had held that seat for several terms, then decided to run for the llinois Senate when the Senator from that district decided not to run for re-election, then changed his mind and decided to seek re-election instead. Then the woman decided late to run for her old seat in the House again. This woman was and is some big heroine in the civil rights movement (I forget her name, I'll have to Google it).. Obama managed to have her kicked off of the Democrat primary ballot by mounting an extensive legal campaign that managed to get a number of her signatures on her nominating position disqualified. As a result, Obama had no opponent in the Democrat primary.
>
>In 2004 when Obama ran for the United States Senate his first opponent was Jack Ryan. At the time Ryan was involved in a vicious divorce fight with his wife Jeri Ryan (the actress). Obama and his lawyers threatened to make the divorce case public unless Jack Ryan withdrew from the race. (The Tribune and other sources essentially did the same thing). Somehow they had gotten their hands on the divorce proceedings (which were supposed to be sealed, and contained some ugly details). Among others Mike Ditka turned down the Republican nomination to replace Ryan. In the end the Illinois Republicans managed to talk Allan Keyes into moving from Maryland to Illinois to run against Obama just so they could have someone take on Obama. Obama won that race by about a 4-1 margin.

I don't know anything about the first House race. The 2004 race I do remember and don't recall anyone putting it on Obama. The local media were all over the story. There were actually two Republican candidates who dropped out. IIRC the other one had been beating his wife or something like that. So Obama was certainly the beneficiary of good fortune. If there were dirty tricks involved it seems like it would have come out by now.

You're right, Keyes got creamed. I think it was even more than 80%. By that time a lot of Illinoisans felt like the guy with the funny name was a pretty good one landing in our laps. At the beginning of 2004 he was little known even in Illinois.
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