News & Observer | newsobserver.com | Organizers furious at GOP's mockery

Published: Sep 05, 2008 12:30 AM
Modified: Sep 05, 2008 05:01 AM

Organizers furious at GOP's mockery

 

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ABOUT ORGANIZERS

What do community organizers do? According to a Web site set up to rebut attacks on the profession:

"Community organizers work with families who are struggling -- because of low wages, poor health coverage, unaffordable housing, and other community problems -- so that collectively, we can fix those problems and make our government respond to our day-to-day concerns."

ORGANIZERSFIGHTBACK.WORDPRESS.COM

WHAT THEY SAID

GOP vice presidential pick Sarah Palin: "I guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a community organizer, except that you have actual responsibilities."

Former New York Gov. George Pataki: "What in God's name is a community organizer? I don't even know if that's a job."

Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani: Obama "worked as a community organizer. What? ... OK, OK, maybe this is the first problem on the resume."

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SPRINGFIELD, ILL. - Angry community organizers defended their work, and that of former organizer Barack Obama, as they fought back Thursday against a series of insults by speakers at the Republican National Convention.

Organizers described themselves as the antidote to big-money lobbyists who wield so much influence. They talked about helping powerless people join forces to demand better schools and safer streets, often by working through churches.

"If people in office were doing their jobs, perhaps we wouldn't need community organizers," said John Baumann, executive director of PICO National Network, whose name derives from "people improving communities through organizing."

"I don't like seeing the really hard work that goes on in really poor communities being demeaned by cheap politicians," said Joshua Hoyt, executive director of the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights. "Community organizing is as American as democracy. It believes that ordinary people can do extraordinary things."

Obama, the Democratic presidential nominee, has often talked about his three years as a community organizer in Chicago. He uses it to demonstrate that he understands the problems of people losing their jobs and stuck in deteriorating neighborhoods.

Republicans belittled his organizing experience Wednesday.

Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani began summing up Obama's experience by noting he had worked as a community organizer. "What?" he said, with a tone of disbelief. "Maybe this is the first problem on the resume," Giuliani said.

Vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin touted her credentials as mayor of an Alaskan town. "I guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a community organizer, except that you have actual responsibilities," she told the cheering crowd.

Several organizing groups condemned the remarks.

John Raskin, who works to make low-income housing available in Manhattan, quickly launched a Web site to respond. It attracted scores of responses Thursday from organizers upset by the criticism.

"I just think it's adding insult to injury," Raskin said of the Republican comments. "First, to create an economy that leaves out so many people and then to insult people who are trying to help."

Obama even raised the issue in a fundraising appeal to supporters, saying that "Republicans mocked, dismissed, and actually laughed out loud at Americans who engage in community service and organizing."

Dave Beckwith, executive director of the Needmor Fund in Toledo, Ohio, said it would be wrong to assume community organizers and the people they help are all liberals. They include both Democrats and Republicans, and their work can involve clashing with politicians from both parties, he said.

"This is an election that I understand to be about the middle," Beckwith said. "People active in community life and who have aspirations for their communities -- it seems to me that anyone would want to speak those people respectfully."

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