Having now left Trinity
United Church of Christ, can Barack Obama escape
responsibility for his decades-long ties to Michael
Pfleger and Jeremiah Wright? No, he cannot. Obama’s
connections to the radical-left politics espoused by
Pfleger and Wright are broad and deep. The real
reason Obama bound himself to Wright and Pfleger in
the first place is that he largely approved of their
political-theological outlooks.
Obama shared Wright’s rejection of black
“assimilation.” Obama also shared Wright’s suspicion
of the traditional American ethos of individual
self-improvement and the pursuit of “middle-classness.”
In common with Wright, Obama had deep misgivings
about America’s criminal justice system. And with
the exception of their direct attacks on whites,
Obama largely approved of his preacher-friends’
fiery rhetoric. Obama’s goal was not to repudiate
religious radicalism but to channel its fervor into
an effective and permanent activist organization.
How do we know all this? We know it because Obama
himself has told us.
A Revealing Profile
Although it’s been discussed before (because it
confirms that Obama attended Louis Farrakhan’s
Million Man March),
a 1995 background piece on Obama from the
Chicago Reader has received far too little
attention. Careful consideration of this important
profile makes it clear that Obama’s long-standing
ties to Chicago’s most rabidly radical preachers
call into question far more than Obama’s judgment
and character (although they certainly do that, as
well). Obama’s two-decades at Trinity open a
critically important window onto his radical-left
political leanings. No mere change of church
membership can erase that truth.
By providing us with an in-depth picture of Obama’s
political worldview on the eve of his elective
career, Hank De Zutter’s, “What Makes Obama Run?”
lives up to its title. The first thing to note here
is that Obama presents his political hopes for the
black community as a third way between two
inadequate alternatives. First, Obama rejects, “the
unrealistic politics of integrationist assimilation
— which helps a few upwardly mobile blacks to ‘move
up, get rich, and move out. . . . ’ ” This statement
might surprise many Obama supporters, who seem to
think of him as the epitome of integrationism. Yet
Obama’s repudiation of integrationist upward
mobility is fully consistent with his career as a
community organizer, his general sympathy for
leftist critics of the American “system,” and of
course his membership at Trinity. Obama, we are
told, “quickly learned that integration was a
one-way street, with blacks expected to assimilate
into a white world that never gave ground.” Compare
these statements by Obama with some of the
remarks in Jeremiah Wright’s
Trumpet,
and the resemblance is clear.
Having disposed of assimilation, Obama goes on to
criticize “the politics of black rage and black
nationalism” — although less on substance than on
tactics. Obama upbraids the politics of black power
for lacking a practical strategy. Instead of
diffusing black rage by diverting it to the
traditional American path of assimilation and
middle-class achievement, Obama wants to capture the
intensity of black anger and use it to power an
effective political organization. Obama says, “he’s
tired of seeing the moral fervor of black folks
whipped up — at the speaker’s rostrum and from the
pulpit — and then allowed to dissipate because
there’s no agenda, no concrete program for change.”
The problem is not fiery rhetoric from the pulpit,
but merely the wasted anger it so usefully stirs.
Obama’s Network
De Zutter gives us a clear glimpse of Obama’s
radicalism. Obama is called “progressive,” of
course, and is said to yearn for “massive economic
change.” That could simply mean an end to widespread
poverty, rather than social restructuring. Yet Obama
is also described as holding “a worldview well
beyond” his mother’s “New Deal, Peace Corps,
position-paper liberalism.” De Zutter lays out
Obama’s ties to radical groups like Chicago Acorn,
as Acorn’s lead organizer, Madeleine Talbott, is
quoted affirming that: “Barack has proven himself
among our members . . . we accept and respect him as
a kindred spirit, a fellow organizer.” In “
Inside
Obama’s Acorn,” I explore Obama’s links to this
radical group, and to Talbott, who practices the
sort of intimidating and often illegal “direct
action” Acorn is famous for. (For more on Talbott’s
affinity for “direct action,” see “
Where
Do We Begin?”)
De Zutter also touches on some other key elements of
Obama’s network. Obama’s early organizing work for
the Developing Communities Project was “funded by
south-side Catholic churches.” Clearly, this early
work cemented Obama’s close ties to Father Pfleger,
whose support formed a critical component of Obama’s
grassroots network. Precisely because of this early
link, Pfleger threw his considerable support behind
Obama’s failed 2000 bid for Congress. By the way,
Pfleger’s political influence in Chicago is such
that Mayor Richard Daley actually declared his 2002
candidacy for a fourth full term as mayor at
Pfleger’s St. Sabina church. In “
Inside
Obama’s Acorn,” I explore the possibility that
Obama’s seat on the boards of a couple liberal
Chicago foundations may have allowed him to direct
funds to groups that served as his de facto
political base. De Zutter quotes Woods Fund
executive director, Jean Rudd, praising Obama for
“being among the most hard-nosed board members in
wanting to see results. He wants to see our grants
make change happen — not just pay salaries.” No
doubt, Obama was sincerely supportive of the sort of
leftist organizations favored by the Woods Fund.
However, if Obama was in fact looking to some of the
groups supported by the Woods Fund as a personal
political base, his unusually active board service
would make all the more sense.
Black Churches
The threads of this political network are pulled
tighter as Obama turns to a “favorite topic,” “the
lack of collective action among black churches.”
Obama is sharply critical of churches that try to
help their communities merely through “food pantries
and community service programs.” Today, Obama
rationalizes his ties to Wright’s Trinity Church by
citing its community service programs. Yet in 1995,
Obama was highly critical of churches that focused
exclusively on such services, while neglecting the
sort of politically visionary sermons, local
king-making, and political alliance-building favored
by Pfleger and Wright. Obama rejects the strictly
community-service approach of apolitical churches as
part of America’s unfortunate “bias” toward
“individual action.” Obama believes that what he
derogates as “John Wayne” thinking and the old,
“right wing...individualistic bootstrap myth” needs
to be replaced: “We must unite in collective action,
build collective institutions and organizations.”
Obama sees the black church as the key to his plan
for collective social and political action: “Obama .
. . spoke of the need to mobilize and organize the
economic power and moral fervor of black churches.
He also argued that as a state senator he might help
bring this about faster than as a community
organizer or civil rights lawyer.” Says Obama, “We
have some wonderful preachers in town — preachers
who continue to inspire me — preachers who are
magnificent at articulating a vision of the world as
it should be.” Obama continues, “But as soon as
church lets out, the energy dissipates. We must find
ways to channel all this energy into community
building.” Obama seems to be holding up people like
Wright, Pfleger, and James Meeks (who he has listed
as his key religious allies) as positive models for
the wider black church — in both their rhetoric, and
in their willingness to play a direct political
role. If anything, Obama would like to see the
political visions of Wright and Pfleger given
greater weight and substance by connecting them to
secular leftist political networks like Acorn.
End Run
By the end of De Zutter’s piece, Obama’s distinctive
vision comes clear. While in his years as a Chicago
organizer and attorney, Obama took care to maintain
friendly ties to the Daley administration, in
Obama’s campaign for state senate, he specifically
avoided asking the mayor or the mayor’s closest
allies for support. Obama’s plan was to make an
end-run around Chicago’s governing Democratic
political network, by building a coalition of
left-leaning black churches and radical secular
organizations like Acorn (perhaps with de facto help
from liberal foundation money as well). This
coalition would provide Obama with the flexibility
to play out a political career some distance to the
left of conventional Illinois democratic politics.
And sure enough, Obama’s extremely liberal record in
Illinois vindicated his strategy.
The De Zutter story sheds considerable light on the
debate over the significance of Obama’s ties to
Pfleger and Wright. For the most part, that debate
plays out with a relatively apolitical notion of
church membership in mind. Obama’s defenders say
that he should not be held responsible for the
occasional political excesses of his preacher.
Critics point out that the extremism of Wright and
Pfleger is long-standing and well known. At some
point, this line of thinking goes, the radicalism of
such preachers ought to become intolerable. And what
does it say about Obama’s judgement that he actually
built his own national reputation by pointing to his
appreciation of Wright’s sermons? Obama’s critics
also see his decision to join Wright’s church as an
opportunistic move by a politically ambitious
secular humanist in search of a respectable
religious home.
I agree with all of these criticisms of Obama. Yet
De Zutter’s article shows us that the full story of
Obama’s ties to Pfleger and Wright is both more
disturbing and more politically relevant than we’ve
realized up to now. On Obama’s own account, the
rhetoric and vision of Chicago’s most politically
radical black churches are exactly what he wants to
see more of. True, when discussing Louis Farrakhan
with De Zutter, Obama makes a point of repudiating
anti-white, anti-Semitic, and anti-Asian sermons.
Yet having laid down that proviso, Obama seems to
relish the radicalism of preachers like Pfleger and
Wright. In 1995, Obama didn’t want Trinity’s
political show to stop. His plan was to spread it to
other black churches, and harness its power to an
alliance of leftist groups and sympathetic elected
officials.
So Obama’s political interest in Trinity went far
beyond merely gaining a respectable public Christian
identity. On his own account, Obama hoped to use the
untapped power of the black church to supercharge
hard-left politics in Chicago, creating a personal
and institutional political base that would be free
to part with conventional Democratic politics. By
his own testimony, Obama would seem to have allied
himself with Wright and Pfleger, not in spite of,
but precisely because of their radical left-wing
politics. It follows that Obama’s ties to Trinity
reflect on far more than his judgment and character
(although they certainly implicate that). Contrary
to common wisdom, then, Obama’s religious history
has everything to do with his political values and
policy positions, since it confirms his affinity for
leftist radicalism.
Sense of
Mission
It could be argued that the new and
supposedly moderate, “bipartisan” Obama of 2008 is
the real Obama. Unfortunately, that argument is
unconvincing. Again and again, De Zutter reports
that Obama’s true passion, deepest calling, and most
authentic sense of mission is to be found in his
early community organizing work. Obama’s own vision
for himself as a legislator is as a kind of
super-organizer/activist, extending the
“progressive” quest for “social justice” to society
as a whole.
I see no reason to doubt Obama’s self-account, and
many reasons to accept it. As De Zutter notes, Obama
gave up a near-certain Supreme Court clerkship to
come to Chicago and do community organizing. It’s
also easy to imagine Obama joining one of the many
other less radical black churches on the south side
of Chicago, if that was all he needed to launch a
political career. Clearly, given his good relations
with the Daley administration, Obama could have
asked for its support in his bid for the Illinois
State Senate. Yet at every turn, Obama took a
riskier path. That suggests he was operating from
conviction. Trouble is, the conviction in question
was apparently Obama’s belief in the sort of radical
social and economic views held by groups like Acorn
and preachers like Wright and Pfleger.
Obama was certainly more rhetorically smooth, and no
doubt less personally embittered than some of his
mentors. Yet what stands out after a consideration
of Obama’s larger personal and political history is
the general convergence of political orientation
between Wright, Pfleger, Acorn, Chicago’s
“progressive” foundations, and Obama himself. Obama
in Chicago was a man of the Left, doing his
level-best to assemble a coalition free from the
constraints of conventional, middle-ground
Democratic politics.
Obama
Speaks
If there is any doubt about the accuracy of
De Zutter’s detailed account, we get the same
message from this too-little discussed but revealing
and important piece by Obama himself.
This chapter from a 1990 book called
After
Alinsky: Community Organizing in Illinois was
originally published in 1988, just after Obama
joined Trinity. The piece is called, “Why Organize?
Problems and Promise in the Inner City,” and it
shows exactly what Obama hoped to make of his
association with Pfleger and Wright.
Obama begins by rejecting the false dichotomy
between radicalism and moderation:
The debate as to how black and other
dispossessed people can forward their lot in
America is not new. From W.E.B. DuBois to Booker
T. Washington to Marcus Garvey to Malcolm X to
Martin Luther King, this internal debate has
raged between integration and nationalism,
between accommodation and militancy, between
sit-down strikes and boardroom negotiations. The
lines between these strategies have never been
simply drawn, and the most successful black
leadership has recognized the need to bridge
these seemingly divergent approaches.
Of course, even James Cone, the radical founder
of black-liberation theology, sees himself as
synthesizing the moderation of Martin Luther King
Jr. with the radicalism of Malcolm X. Obama here
seems to be calling for an inside/outside strategy
like the one he would have learned
working with Chicago Acorn. Note Obama’s
reference to the controversial tradition of “direct
action” favored by Acorn (and earlier by Saul
Alinsky, whose tradition of radicalism the book is
meant to carry on). Obama offers radicalism with a
moderate face.
Obama sketches out a vision in which a
politically awakened black church would ally with
“community organizers” (like Obama and his friends
from Acorn), thereby radicalizing the politics of
America’s cities:
Nowhere is the promise of organizing more
apparent than in the traditional black churches.
Possessing tremendous financial resources,
membership and — most importantly — values and
biblical traditions that call for empowerment
and liberation, the black church is clearly a
slumbering giant in the political and economic
landscape of cities like Chicago.
After expressing disappointment with apolitical
black churches focused only on traditional community
services, Obama goes on to point in a more activist
direction:
Over the past few years, however, more and
more young and forward-thinking pastors have
begun to look at community organizations such as
the Developing Communities Project in the far
south side [where Obama himself worked, and
first encountered Pfleger, SK]...as a powerful
tool for living the social gospel, one which can
educate and empower entire congregations and not
just serve as a platform for a few prophetic
leaders. Should a mere 50 prominent black
churches, out of thousands that exist in cities
like Chicago, decide to collaborate with a
trained and organized staff, enormous positive
changes could be wrought....
Give me 50 Pflegers or 50 Wrights, Obama is
saying, tie them to a network of grassroots
activists like my companions from Acorn, and we can
revolutionize urban politics.
Mystery Solved
So it would appear that Obama’s own writings solve
the mystery of why he stayed at Trinity for 20
years. Obama’s long-held and decidedly audacious
hope has been to spread Wright’s radical spirit by
linking it to a viable, left-leaning political
program, with Obama himself at the center. The
revolutionizing power of a politically awakened
black church is not some side issue, or merely a
personal matter, but has been the signature theme of
Obama’s grand political strategy.
Lucky for Obama, this political background is
unfamiliar to most Americans. There are others who
share Obama’s approach, however. Take a look at this
piece by Manhattan Institute scholar Steven Malanga
on “The
Rise of the Religious Left,” and you will see
exactly where Obama is coming from. Malanga ends his
account by noting that religious-left activists
often partner with groups like MoveOn.org and attend
gatherings featuring speakers like Michael Moore.
After the 2004 election, there was some talk of the
Democratic party “purging” MoveOn and Moore. Far
from purging its radical Left, however, the
Democratic party is now just inches away from
placing it in the driver’s seat. That is the real
meaning of the fiasco at Trinity Church.
—
Stanley Kurtz is a
senior fellow at
the
Ethics and Public Policy Center.