Late on the afternoon of April 1, 1983, a twenty-one-year-old Barack Obama made his way into the historic Great Hall of Manhattan’s Cooper Union to attend a “Socialist Scholars Conference.”1 Within twenty-four hours, his life had transformed. There at that conference Obama discovered his vocation as a community organizer, as well as a political program to guide him throughout his adult life.
When Obama attended that first Socialist Scholars Conference, he was in his senior year at Columbia University, where he’d transferred after two years at Occidental College in Los Angeles. Those Columbia years are more mysterious than any other portion of Obama’s history. The New York Times calls them a “lost chapter” of the president’s life.2 In 2008, the Obama campaign refused to discuss his days at Columbia, declining either to release transcripts or to name friends.3
It’s clear that Obama’s New York interval was a time of “solitude and isolation.” In Obama’s telling, when his mother and sister came to visit, they “just made fun of me because I was so monklike. I had tons of books. I read everything. I think that was the period when I grew as much as I have ever grown intellectually.”4 But what exactly was Obama reading during this interlude of personal isolation and internal growth? In what direction was his restless intellect pushing him? New York’s annual Socialist Scholars Conferences have a great deal to do with the answer to that question, while also suggesting a reason for Obama’s relative silence about his four-year sojourn in New York.
However isolated Obama may have been during his years at Columbia, politics served as at least a partial antidote to the solitude. Obama followed the campus anti-military movement closely, interviewing activists from two organizations, Arms Race Alternatives and Students Against Militarism, for an article he penned entitled, “Breaking the War Mentality.”5 The piece appeared in the campus newsmagazine, Sundial, just three weeks prior to the 1983 Socialist Scholars Conference. In that article, Obama worried that the nuclear freeze movement’s narrow focus on blocking the deployment of just a few controversial weapons systems risked playing into the hands of “military-industrial interests,” with their “billion dollar erector sets.” Pressing the point, Obama wondered whether it might be a mistake to separate disarmament issues from broader social questions. Were nuclear weapons themselves really the problem, or was America’s reluctance to control arms merely a symptom of larger economic and political troubles?6 So while we know that in both his course work and his extracurricular writing at the time,7 Obama was concentrating on international issues, he clearly hoped to approach those questions from the standpoint of a more sweeping critique of American life.
Systematic criticism of American society is exactly what the 1983 Socialist Scholars Conference promised to provide. Fliers and ads featured caricatures of an almost cuddly-looking Karl Marx reclining on a stack of books. Promotions touted the conference as a meeting “In honor of Karl Marx’s centennial (1818–1883).”8 Not by coincidence was this conference held at New York’s Cooper Union. For in the wake of Marx’s death a century before, the Great Hall of this venerable private college had been the site of the largest memorial to the giant of socialism anywhere in the world—a matter of pride for American Marxists to this day. Six thousand mourners crowded into the Cooper Union to honor Marx on March 19, 1883, while five thousand additional mourners were turned away.9
When the renowned nineteenth-century Cuban journalist and revolutionary José Martí addressed that memorial assembly, he acknowledged the fearsome nature of Marx’s task of “setting men in opposition against men.” Yet “an outlet must be found for this anger, so that the brutality might cease,” said Martí. Then, gesturing toward the large, leaf-garlanded picture of Marx that dominated Cooper Union’s Great Hall that day, Martí lauded Marx as an “ardent reformer, uniter of men of different peoples, and tireless, powerful organizer.”10 A century later, the vocation of socialist organizer was alive, well, and still reverberating through Cooper Union’s halls.
The opening remarks of the 1983 Cooper Union Socialist Scholars Conference were delivered by City University of New York (CUNY) professor Frances Fox Piven.11 Piven served on the National Executive Committee of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) in the 1980s, and the conference itself was sponsored by the DSA.12 Widely recognized as a preeminent theorist, strategist, and historian of community organizing, with a keen sense of the roots of contemporary organizing in America’s early communist and socialist movements, Piven was an obvious choice to open the conference. Piven’s ties to ACORN (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now) ran deep, and this conference would provide her with an opportunity to put forward her latest innovation—a voter registration strategy designed to radicalize the Democratic Party and polarize the country along class lines. Piven’s strategy would be carried out in collaboration with ACORN, Project Vote, and related organizations over the ensuing decades.13 Not coincidentally, Obama would soon embark on a lifetime alliance with these very groups. Yet discussion of Piven’s latest strategic thinking would await the following morning’s panels. To open a conference in honor of Marx’s centennial, Piven offered an appropriately expansive reflection on Marx’s relevance to the present.
Although there are few easily accessible published accounts of the 1983 Cooper Union Socialist Scholars Conference, it is possible to piece together not only Piven’s opening remarks, but what the experience of the larger conference would have been like for Obama and others. Piven’s personal papers at the Sophia Smith Collection of Smith College contain a conference brochure, as well as hand-written notes of her opening remarks. The Records of the Democratic Socialists of America at New York University’s Tamiment Library contain files on the ’83 conference, and various other relevant internal documents. Contemporaneous publications by conference participants in assorted socialist periodicals cast substantial light on the content of many presentations, and microfilm records of the American Marxist Guardian newspaper include reportage on the ’83 conference. These and other sources make it possible to reconstruct the day that changed Barack Obama’s life.
The Marx invoked by Piven in her brief but eloquent opening conference remarks was less the economic theorist or historian than the man whose ideas “helped people around the globe to struggle to make history.” With Marx’s help, said Piven, “common people became historical actors, and their history is far from over.” “We must stand within the intellectual and political tradition Marx bequeathed,” she continued, yet treat it not as a “dead inheritance,” but as a “living tradition—the creation of thinking, active people” who shape history inspired by Marx’s ideas, yet continually adjusting and adapting those ideas to “new political conditions.”14
Anyone familiar with Piven’s writings, like her 1977 classic, Poor People’s Movements: Why They Succeed, How They Fail, with Richard Cloward, will know how seriously she meant those words.15 Piven’s organizing strategies actively, yet never slavishly, draw upon Marx’s thought, even as they adapt the Marxist tradition to modern American circumstances. The secret, well understood by leading organizers (Barack Obama included), yet still unknown to the vast majority of Americans, is that contemporary community organizing is largely a socialist enterprise—a novel adaptation of Marxist principles and practices to modern American realities. Marx himself was a great organizer, and America’s leading community organizers are Marxists. By calling on common folk to seize and make their own history on the model of Marx—even if in a novel American context—Piven was acknowledging the socialist character of contemporary community organizing.
Thus we arrive at the central question. What if Barack Obama’s fiercest critics are right? What if the president of the United States is a socialist? The Obama-as-socialist claim is often dismissed as an outrageous exaggeration. After all, socialism calls for collective ownership of the “means of production.” Bailouts of General Motors and the banking system, expanded energy regulation, and high government spending notwithstanding, Obama has proposed nothing like a sweeping government takeover of America’s entire business system. It’s true that government command of the nation’s health-care system would encompass up to 16 percent of the economy, yet Obama denies that fully nationalized health care is his goal.16 Even if his critics are right and Obama quietly favors transition to a government-run “single-payer” plan over the long term, the lion’s share of the free-enterprise system would remain intact. Moreover, since many non-socialist liberals favor government-run health care, it seems unfair to label even the most expansive interpretation of Obama’s health-care goals as socialist.
Part of the problem here turns on questions of definition. On both the right and the left, socialism can be defined strictly (as total government control of an essentially redistributive economy) or loosely (as any governmentally imposed compromise of pure capitalist principles on behalf of economic equality). If you define socialism strictly, then claims that Obama is a socialist look like overheated slander. Defined more loosely, even left-leaning Newsweek can claim that “we are all socialists now,” and conservatives can legitimately raise warning flags about the long-term implications for liberty and prosperity of ambitious liberal reforms.17
But if it’s all a matter of semantics, why bother? Why not just drop the whole “socialism” debate as a sticky, impossible-to-pin-down, emotionally fraught mess? That’s how it seemed to me during the 2008 presidential campaign, when I published a long series of investigative articles on Obama’s political background and ideology. When the question of Obama’s alleged socialism came up in interviews, I’d try to bracket the issue. You can make a good argument that he is, I’d agree, but ultimately I put the socialism issue off as a sticky, irresolvable question of definition.18 What I did claim in 2008, and what I expected to argue in this book, is that Obama’s political convictions are vastly farther to the left than the popular image of a bipartisan, technocratic, and pragmatic Obama acknowledges.
So when I began my post-campaign research for this book, my inclination was to downplay or dismiss evidence of explicit socialism in Obama’s background. I thought the socialism issue was an unprovable and unnecessary distraction from the broader question of Obama’s ultra-liberal inclinations. I was wrong. Evidence that suggests Obama is a socialist, I am now convinced, is real, important, and profoundly relevant to the present. It took some time to uncover the details of the 1983 Socialist Scholars Conference that I now believe had so formative an influence on Obama’s political career. It was earlier, however—when I discovered programs from the 1984 and 1985 Socialist Scholars Conferences (which I believe Obama also attended)—that I began to change my mind about the Obama-as-socialist issue.19 I did a double-take when I saw those conference programs dotted with names I’d run across researching Obama’s world of community organizing. I was particularly stunned to see that Jeremiah Wright’s theological mentor, the eminent black liberation theologian James Cone, had spoken at the 1984 Socialist Scholars Conference.20 Could Obama have been familiar with the Marxist-inflected theology that inspired Jeremiah Wright well before he moved to Chicago? Could this help explain why Obama chose Wright as his pastor?
The more I dug into things, the more the theme of socialism appeared to tie together various aspects of Obama’s political life. It quickly became clear that I would not be able to set the issue aside. But what about all those messy definitional questions? I had no choice but to dive in and confront them. I’d have to educate myself in the socialism of the 1980s, and beyond. What I discovered through researching contemporary American socialism changed my way of thinking about Barack Obama, and about much else besides.
Having once taught Marx alongside a series of other thinkers in a university “Great Books” program, I thought I understood at least the basics. After reading history’s leading radical, I worked with a fairly strict definition of socialism: full collective control of the means of production. This academic background was yet another reason why the whole Obama-as-socialist question made me uncomfortable.
I thought I knew too much, but in fact I knew too little. My academic interest in Marx had focused on his theories of history and society. I was far less knowledgeable about Marx’s strategy and tactics—his vision of how a socialist world would actually come about. The simple answer, of course, is that Marx expected to see capitalism overthrown by a violent socialist revolution. Yet there’s a great deal more to it than that. Marx “the organizer” was a subtle fellow. The world’s most famous revolutionary was often willing to use democratic means to achieve his ultimate ends. Marx was prepared to compromise his long-term goals in pursuit of short-term gains, particularly when he thought this democratic maneuvering would position the communist movement for more radical breakthroughs in the future. And Marx-the-democrat was sometimes less than fully open about his ultimate goals. He recognized that not only his enemies, but even potential followers could be put off by his most radical plans. So, depending on context, even with workers he aspired to lead in revolution, Marx withheld the full truth of who he was and what he hoped to achieve.21
These are the sorts of questions socialists debate amongst themselves. Marx never systematized his strategic or tactical thinking, and various groups of followers interpret his example differently. Some downplay Marx’s tactical compromises and focus on the goal of a violent revolution designed to usher in full-scale authoritarian socialism. Others claim that Marx would have happily achieved his revolutionary goals by peaceful democratic means, if he’d thought that would work. These “democratic socialists” add that a peaceful political path to socialism is the only route that makes sense in America’s thoroughly democratic context. The most committed democratic socialists even claim to reject authoritarian socialism altogether. Socialism and democracy, they say, are complementary goals.
This is the stuff of never-ending factional dispute among American socialists: Should we socialists eschew capitalist-tainted politics and foment revolution? Or should we openly (or perhaps not so openly) dive into America’s electoral system and try to turn its political currents in our own direction? Should we accept only full-scale socialism at-a-blow, or should we settle for a piecemeal transition to a socialist world, even if that risks co-optation by capitalism along the way? In other words, the battle over relatively “strict” and “loose” definitions of socialism is constantly being waged among socialists themselves.
Few Americans understand any of this. More to the point, the bubbling, breathing, living world of American socialism in the decades that followed the upheavals of the sixties is almost totally unknown to us. There are few serious accounts of America’s socialist left in the seventies, eighties, and nineties. Yet Barack Obama’s political life—and the world of community organizing generally—is intimately bound up with the story of American socialism during those decades. It is a story we’ll have to teach ourselves. Because once you understand the socialism that dominated that 1983 conference in New York, the notion of a socialist American president looks less like an absurd exaggeration and more like an all-too-disturbingly real possibility.
Various objections can be raised to this line of argument. On one popular view, for example, President Obama is not an ideologue but a pragmatist. After all, any politician vying for success in a South Chicago district populated by impoverished minority and liberal university voters would have to lean left. On ascending to the presidency, an essentially pragmatic Obama would presumably revert to a moderate, even bipartisan, stance, in keeping with his national constituency.
One problem with the “pragmatist” argument is that Obama actively chose Hyde Park as his adoptive home. In other words, Obama selected one of the most left-leaning districts in the nation as his political base for a reason. And Obama was clearly walking a radical path well before he stepped into Cooper Union’s Great Hall. In a famous passage of his memoir, Dreams from My Father, Obama speaks of carefully choosing his friends at Occidental College from among the “Marxist professors,” “structural feminists,” and other radical outsiders. Even in his early college years, Obama was determined “to avoid being mistaken for a sellout.”22
In February of 2010, John C. Drew, an acquaintance of Obama around 1980–81, reported that during his time at Occidental College, Obama was a “pure Marxist socialist.” According to Drew—himself a Marxist radical in his youth—the young Obama hewed to the “Marxist-Leninist” view that a violent socialist revolution was likely within his lifetime. The job of a proper radical, Obama believed, was to prepare for that event.23 A couple of months later, in April of 2010, David Remnick’s fascinating, thoughtful, and highly sympathetic biography of Obama effectively confirmed Drew’s report by revealing that the future president and many of his closest friends at Occidental College were socialists.24 This collection of evidence from diverse sources regarding Obama’s early socialist convictions could be dismissed as proof of nothing more than the passing ideological fling of a young man in college. After studying Obama’s life, however, these reports strike me as merely the most visible markers along what is in fact a continuous ideological trail, ranging from the childhood influence of Obama’s radical mentor, Frank Marshall Davis, to the Socialist Scholars Conferences of Obama’s New York years, to the future president’s community organizing days and political career.
No doubt, for many a mature politician of pragmatic bent, the passing fancies of youth just don’t matter anymore. Obama is not that type. Everything about his story bespeaks continuity and sincerity of con- viction. While Dreams from My Father does much to obscure the details of Obama’s political beliefs and actions, the larger message of the book is that his progressive political stance is sincerely held. Dreams makes it clear, moreover, that progressive politics served as the solution to Obama’s personal crisis—the internal struggle forced upon him by his biracial heritage and his father’s tragic absence.
In other words, Obama’s long-time political convictions are nothing if not deeply and sincerely held. That is virtually the point of Dreams. On this score, at least, I believe Obama’s self-portrayal to be entirely accurate. Obama is a community organizer who sincerely believes what other community organizers believe. The problem is that community organizers are not forthcoming about the true nature of their beliefs. All too often, they consciously mask a hard-edged socialism in feel-good euphemistic code. The word “pragmatism,” moreover, holds a special place of honor in that same deliberately misleading language.25
Another objection to accounts of Obama’s radicalism holds that even if the president did have a youthful infatuation with socialism, it was just a passing phase. Yet there are abundant signs of continuity in Obama’s political views. In July of 2009, the New York Times dusted off the president’s twenty-six-year-old Sundial essay for a front-page article entitled “Youthful Ideals Shaped Obama Goal of Nuclear Disarmament.”26 Tracing Obama’s ideas about nuclear weapons from his undergraduate years to the present, the Times concluded that the president’s core convictions on this issue—and even some of his specific phrasing—had changed little over time. No doubt there are many politicians whose youthful writings bear little on present policy. In Obama’s case, however, the connection is strong.
The profound continuity between Obama’s youthful socialism and his adult career has been obscured by the secrecy so common to contemporary socialist endeavor. That secrecy, however, can be breached. Archival research makes it possible to piece together the socialist background of modern community organizing, and also to recover heretofore lost connections between Barack Obama and that hidden socialist world. In particular, investigation reveals significant ties between Obama and the Midwest Academy, arguably the most influential institutional force in community organizing from the seventies through the nineties, and very much a crypto-socialist organization. Nearly every thread of Obama’s career runs directly or indirectly through the Midwest Academy, a fact which has gone almost en- tirely unreported. Along with the Socialist Scholars Conferences of the early eighties, the story of the Midwest Academy will serve as our gateway to a broader understanding of the history of American socialism in the post-sixties era.
Another objection to revelations of Obama’s radicalism is the claim that his early ties and convictions have no real bearing on his conduct as president. Now that the campaign is over, this argument goes, the president’s past is effectively off the table and all that really matters is his conduct in office. Since Obama hasn’t appointed William Ayers as Secretary of Education or proposed a full-scale government takeover of the economy, there is simply no point in rehashing his past, however radical it may or may not have been.
There are several problems with this argument. For one thing, the president actually has appointed a number of controversial radicals, whose selection can fairly be connected to his own political past.27 And consider the most important domestic issue of Obama’s presidency: health care. A critical moment in the health-care debate came in early August of 2009, when a video montage of contradictory statements about health reform by President Obama and others went viral.28 The video montage opens with a clip of President Obama shooting down what he calls “illegitimate” claims that a health-care “public option” is actually a “Trojan horse” for a “single-payer” system. In other words, the president denies any intention to lever a government-sponsored health-care plan (which individuals could reject in favor of private insurance) into a total federal takeover of the nation’s health-care system. As we’ve seen, the president goes so far as to dismiss the “Trojan horse” argument as unfit for legitimate debate.
Yet just after that clip comes another from 2007, in which candi- date Obama refers to a one- to two-decade transition period during which he hopes his health reforms will undermine private insurance plans. Then comes a clip of Obama from 2003 in which he forcefully announces his support of a single-payer health-care system. This is followed by a clip of Massachusetts congressman Barney Frank saying, in effect, that the public option really is a Trojan horse for single-payer. Then follows Illinois congresswoman Jan Schakowsky, proudly agreeing with critics of reform that the public option will put the insurance industry out of business. Schakowsky favors a government-run system and plainly wants the private insurance industry to go bust as quickly as possible. Having displayed these “confessions” by Obama, Frank, and Schakowsky, the montage cuts back to a clip of President Obama smoothly claiming that “nobody is talking about some government takeover of health care.” Nobody but Frank, Schakowsky, and Obama, anyway.
This video had a devastating impact on public support for the Democrats’ health-care plan and played a important part in driving the town hall “Tea Party” protests of August 2009. The administration attempted to rebut the video by dismissing the early footage of Obama as misleading and out of context.29 Yet the White House never showed—or even tried to show—that a fair and contextual understanding of Obama’s pre-2009 views would in fact contradict the upshot of those clips.
One lesson from this dustup is that the pre-presidential history of Barack Obama has already had an enormous impact to our policy debates—and rightly so. We cannot simply dismiss the past and focus only on what the president says and does in the here and now, because almost any policy change—particularly the sort of sweeping reforms advocated by President Obama—opens a vast range of additional possibilities. To a large extent, the outcome of any reform will ultimately depend on where the president wants the country to go over the long term. So the mind of the man who will enforce and propose the laws over a four- to eight-year period has everything to do with what any single reform will someday become—a simple system fix or an opening to radical change. To know the president’s mind is to know a great deal.
In the case of health care, the more deeply we delve into the context of Obama’s early policy views, the more radical—and sincerely held—they appear to be. While it can theoretically be argued that Obama’s initial support for single-payer health care was a pragmatic adjustment to the demands of his left-leaning Hyde Park constituency, evidence suggests the opposite. From his early community organizer days to his time in the Illinois State Senate, Obama worked closely with health-care advocates of broadly socialist conviction.
Obama’s key ally during his pro-single-payer state senate days was Quentin Young, a health-care activist and, according to documentary sources, a leading Chicago socialist. One of Young’s most important partners in health-care advocacy was John McKnight, an admirer of some of the more radical health and welfare proposals of Sweden’s left-leaning social planners. McKnight was an organizing mentor to Obama, and also recommended him for law school. Illinois congresswoman Jan Schakowsky, who so boldly promised a slide down the slippery slope to single-payer on that video, was, according to documentary evidence, an active member of the Chicago-area branch of the Democratic Socialists of America. Schakowsky also had close ties to the crypto-socialist Midwest Academy (so important to Obama’s own career), and to the Academy-run network of community organizations.30
Taken in isolation, any one of these political partnerships would not necessarily imply or prove that Obama himself was a socialist. After all, politicians frequently work in coalitions with others whose views they do not entirely share. As we dive more deeply into published and archival records, however, a powerful pattern emerges. Obama’s ties to the world of community organizing—which he himself portrays as bonds of authentic conviction—seem to flow from a strategy Obama first embraced at those Socialist Scholars Conferences in New York. Viewed in the full sweep of Obama’s political development, his early socialist alliances appear to be products of sincere belief, while his suave reassurances as president take on an air of pragmatic backpedaling and dissembling. If Obama is pragmatic, it is pragmatism in pursuit of long-term radical goals.
No doubt, this connecting of the empirical dots will give rise to charges of “red-baiting.” Too often this word merely invokes the ghosts of the McCarthy era to delegitimate any criticism of the hard left. Yet it is entirely within bounds to criticize socialists for their politics. There’s a difference between irresponsible name-calling and responsible reporting. I call for no boycotts of Bernie Sanders supporters (Sanders being the openly socialist senator from Vermont). Nor do I ask HMOs to drop socialist doctors, or film studios to shun socialist writers (although I reserve the right to express my dislike of Hollywood’s politics). More important, the American people aren’t particularly interested in blacklisting socialists either.
Senator Sanders’s socialist views, however, are out in the open. His socialism is liable to informed acceptance or rejection by the voters of Vermont. This is where I think the president falls short. At a minimum, socialist or not, Barack Obama is vastly further to the left than much of the public realizes. Largely through grievous sins of omission, but sometimes through false denials as well, he has systematically misled the American people about the true nature of his views. The degree of subterfuge here goes far beyond the typical prevarication and backtracking found in politicians of national ambition. This much I argued during the 2008 campaign, and expected to repeat in this book. Yet I now believe we can go further.
Evidence clearly indicates that the president of the United States is a socialist. I mean to lay out the evidence and allow the reader to decide if the conclusion is warranted. That Obama was a socialist in college and early adulthood is hard to deny at this point. The real question is whether Obama abandoned his socialist convictions, or like so many of his community organizer colleagues, simply drove them underground.
There is a great deal more at stake here than a simplistic game of pin-the-socialist-tail-on-the-Democratic-donkey. The same sources that confirm the radicalism of Obama’s allies Quentin Young and John McKnight also reveal the frightening implications for liberty of even the most well-intended and supposedly “democratic” variations of socialism. Likewise, sources that reveal the socialist background of Congresswoman Schakowsky also illuminate the larger political intentions and strategies of community organizing in modern America. My study of the post-sixties history of American socialism has not only been a personal education, it has also been downright frightening. As American socialism has turned largely invisible (with honorable exceptions like Bernie Sanders), the public has largely forgotten what socialism means and just how dangerous it can be. I hope this book will help to serve as a reminder, not only of socialism’s hidden, incremental, and electorally based strategies, but also of precisely how harmful this brand of politics is.
Guilt by association? Everything I’ve been arguing tells against that charge. I am not talking about neighborly friendships—or merely pragmatic political alliances—between Barack Obama and partners of far more radical conviction. My claim is that Barack Obama himself has long been drawn to socialism, and has worked in close and deep political partnership with a wide array of socialists throughout his career—out of inner conviction. The political romance, moreover, gives no indication of ever having ceased. Under the tutelage of Frank Marshall Davis, a young Obama drank in socialist radicalism. He nurtured this stance in college, then built a mature socialist worldview around the theories and strategies he encountered at the New York Socialist Scholars Conferences of the early eighties. As a community organizer and aspiring politician, Obama lived and worked—by conviction—in the midst of Chicago’s largely hidden socialist world, the existence of which had been disclosed to him by those conferences in New York. Obama’s rise within Chicago’s socialist universe was no accident. The future president’s organizing and political careers depended upon his gaining the confidence and support of some of the savviest socialists in the country. Obama could hardly have won their trust without largely sharing their politics. Very little of this immersion in the world of socialism has even been acknowledged, much less repudiated, by the president. It is his secret.
What then of Bill Ayers and Jeremiah Wright? We can think of these two men and their relationship to Barack Obama on the model of the Willis Tower (formerly Sears Tower) and the John Hancock Center in Chicago’s skyline. Approaching Chicago’s downtown from a distance, one of these two immense towers will likely be all you see of the city. For a time it may even appear as though these dual landmarks are all there is to Chicago’s downtown. On closer approach, however, just below the level of these looming giants, a vast and brilliant line of gleaming skyscrapers appears. So, too, President Obama’s ties to William Ayers and Jeremiah Wright are simply the most obvious indicators of a far more widespread phenomenon. Obama’s radical ties are broad and deep—high and wide. What’s at stake here—far more than two very large embarrassments—is an extended, if partially obscured, radical political world. It is a world Obama himself has long been a part of.
In 2008, my attempt to access the archives of an education foundation jointly run by William Ayers and Barack Obama helped inject the Ayers issue into the presidential campaign.31 I also helped uncover the full significance of Obama’s ties to ACORN, and reported new information about Reverend Wright as well.32 During the Ayers uproar of 2008, the Obama campaign took aggressive steps to discredit me, even attempting to block my appearance on Milt Rosenberg’s respected Chicago radio program.33 Later in the campaign, when I wrote about Obama’s still poorly understood links to the ACORN-controlled “New Party,” the Obama campaign attacked me again.34
Although I’m proud to have had some small part in the 2008 presidential campaign, I never felt that either the McCain camp or, certainly, the mainstream press had quite caught the drift of my central argument. Although William Ayers’s history as a Weather Underground terrorist is a worthy and important issue in and of itself, it has never been the most important aspect of the Ayers-Obama link. What’s particularly significant about Obama’s ties with this unrepentant terrorist is less Ayers’s terrorism than the lack of repentance. Since coming out of hiding, Ayers has certainly smoothed out his rhetoric. Yet he’s never truly abandoned his radical views. So the real problem is that Obama had a political alliance with someone as radical as Ayers in the present. And Obama’s Ayers tie is only one of a great many other such radical links. That Ayers’s terrorist past makes him notorious only helps to shed light on the much broader phenomenon of Obama’s hard-left political alliances. That was my argument during the campaign.35
Unfortunately, this point got lost in a debate about Ayers’s past and Obama’s specific knowledge of that history. And although I published extensively on additional ties between Obama and various radical groups right up through election day, the mainstream press effectively circled the wagons and refused to follow up.36 Of course, the economic crisis gave Obama an enormous boost toward the end of the campaign. Even so, greater public awareness of his all-too-genuinely radical past might have made a difference.
It’s past time to bring the president’s background into the light of day. I make no claim here to provide a complete account of Barack Obama’s past. The influence of Obama’s family, his overseas trips, his law school days, and his time in the U.S. Senate all receive relatively limited treatment here, when treated at all. Nor am I interested in Obama’s personal life. I’ve made no attempt to research Obama’s personal relationships, his early drug use (long ago overcome), or like matters. I’m interested in Barack Obama’s political convictions, not his private life (or, for that matter, the circumstances of his birth). Yet I do claim to bring significant new information to the table. I also provide the historical and intellectual context required to make sense of mysteries new and old about Obama’s political convictions. No doubt this material will be sifted, refined, supplemented, and corrected over time. Historians will be researching and debating Obama’s past for decades, perhaps centuries, to come. We are only at the beginning of the discovery process. Yet the full truth about Obama’s hidden socialist world can only be discovered if the phenomenon itself is brought to the surface. That is what I aim to do.