October 14th 2008
Even CNN Is On The ACORN Story
The title on the CNN screen says, for the full two minutes of this segment and probably much longer, “Special Investigations Unit/Registration Fraud Allegations/Hiring Homeless and Drug Addicts” and over that headline for most of the clip are pictures of Barack Obama.
This is CNN, folks, not Fox. That means the people who are listening to this are not largely already in the McCain camp and will therefore be questioning the candidate of their choice, not getting more negative news about a candidate they don’t like.
The report itself is not groundbreaking, but it’s quite good. Wolf Blitzer gives the reporter, Drew Griffen, an opportunity to cut the Obama campaign some slack, pawning off their involvement on “some third party that contracted with ACORN,” but he nixes that, quoting emails between CNN and the campaign that say, “Yes, we did use a subsidiary of ACORN.”
That is not what Obama told reporters today. In a press briefing outside the Maumee Bay Resort and Conference Center in Oregon, OH, he said:
“There is an ACORN organization in Chicago. They have been active. As an elected official, I’ve had interactions with them. But they are not advising our campaign. We’ve got the best voter registration and turnout and volunteer operation in politics right now and we don’t need ACORN’s help.”
He does not mention that he taught community organizing to ACORN, nor does he mention that he paid $800,000 to an ACORN subsidiary in the primaries to register voters – who knows how crookedly – so he could knock off Hillary. Instead he wiggles dishonestly, “… right now and we don’t need ACORN’s help.” Yeah, but “back then” they did.
As for ACORN’s fraudulent operations, Obama sees it differently than the rest of us:
“So there’s been fraud perpetrated on probably ACORN if they paid these individuals and they actually didn’t do registrations.”
Oh. It’s the poor voter registration workers, who are swamped by stacks of fraudulent ACORN voter registration forms dumped on them at the last minute, who are the bad guys. Thanks for that, Barack.Really, really classy.
Here’s another, longer, CNN clip that doesn’t tie ACORN and Obama, but when put together with CNN reporting on the connection will be damning because Griffen shows a signed ACORN registration card for a voter who died last year.
It also includes an ACORN attorney, Brian Mellor, who says ACORN fires people who cheat, but can’t adequately answer whether they fired people in Lake County, IN, after massive ACORN voter fraud was uncovered there. He then goes on, like Obama, to rag on election officials as the cause of the problem.
Mellor is, in a word, offensive, and all middle of the road (and right side of the road) Americans will see him as such, and will think his group’s association with Obama stinks to high heaven.
With CNN joining Fox and ABC, which have been hitting hard on this story for days, we now have a significant part of the TV news-watching electorate getting this nasty story front and center, which is why McCain needs to hammer on Obama and ACORN tomorrow night, much more than the Obama and Ayres hammering.
By the way, CBS hasn’t run an ACORN story since last Friday. NBC finally got around to running a story today (can you say “deliberately asleep at the wheel?”) positioning it as “a registration fraud story, not a voter fraud story.” In the tape they play Obama’s excuses (referenced above) and say the McCain campaign is overstating the Obama-ACORN connection because there’s “no evidence of an ongoing close relationship with ACORN at this point.”
If any of you would like to send me $800,000 I guarantee we’ll have a close relationship.
Obama’s position? “I’ve never worked for ACORN.”


The article delves into the Cloward-Piven strategy, spawned in 1966 by two radical socialist professors from Columbia University, Richard Andrew Cloward and Frances Fox Piven. The strategy was promptly – and accurately – described in The Nation, a publication that would like to put an end to our nation:
Everyone says it’s going to be a tight election, so Obama’s deep support from ballot box-stuffing community organizers may come in very, very handy.
