Remember ACORN? Well, the original left-wing “community
organizing” group may be back in a new guise as a key
behind-the-scenes ally of the Occupy Wall Street (OWS)
movement.
ACORN, the Association of Community Organizers for Reform Now,
fell on hard times in 2010 after damaging videos showing workers in
several of its offices actively helping conservative provocateurs
posing as clients to fraudulently obtain benefits and set up a
child prostitution ring. ACORN allegedly disbanded last year, but
in reality continued its operations under a variety of front-group
names, with one in Atlanta even snagging a Housing and Urban
Development grant despite a congressional ban on federal funding of
ACORN.
In New York, the original ACORN chapter morphed into something
called New York Communities for Change (NYCC). Its head, Jon Kest,
the former head of New York ACORN, has been a big supporter of the
ragtag band that started to occupy Zuccotti Park near Wall Street
last September. NYCC is clearly ACORN under the old mismanagement:
it works out of the old ACORN’s offices in Brooklyn, uses old ACORN
office stationery, and employs much of its former staff.
Just how much Occupy Wall Street has been aided by NYCC has been
revealed by Fox News, which reported that the group has been paying
about 100 homeless people $10 an hour to sit in Zuccotti Park and
fill out the ranks of protesters. NYCC canvassers have gone
door-to-door in poor neighborhoods asking for money for unrelated
causes, even though it eventually wound up in the coffers of Occupy
Wall Street.
“All the money collected from canvasses is pooled together back
at the office, and everything we’ve been working on for the last
year is going to the protests, against big banks and to pay
people’s salaries—and those people on salary are, of course, being
paid to go to the protests every day,” one NYCC staff member told
foxnews.com. “They’re doing the same stuff now that got ACORN in
trouble to begin with.”
Marcel Reid is a former ACORN national board member who split
with the group in 2009 when it withheld details from the board of a
$1 million embezzlement perpetrated on it by the brother of its
co-founder, Wade Radtke. She told me she believes her former ACORN
comrades are behind much of the OWS protests. “The same people I
knew keep popping up,” she said. “It’s like they have Tea Party
envy and have to have their own thing.”
Jonathan Westin, NYCC’s organizing director and a former ACORN
organizer, disputed the Fox story, saying: “In no way are we paying
people to protest at Occupy Wall Street.” He also firmly denied
that any donations had been solicited in neighborhoods under false
pretenses.
But it’s certainly clear the Working Families Party (WFP), an
old offshoot of ACORN that lends its access to the ballot to
left-wing candidates in New York, has been active in recruiting
bodies for Occupy Wall Street. Matthew Vadum of the Capital
Research Center reports that WFP posted ads on Craigslist and
Facebook offering jobs to people willing to “protest the big banks
and Wall Street.”
WFP’s September 26 ad on Craigslist was titled: “FIGHT TO HOLD
WALLSTREET ACCOUNTABLE NOW! MAKE A DIFFERENCE GET PAID!”
The Working Families Party has long had a sketchy past. William
McInerney, the city clerk of Troy, New York, was forced to resign
last summer over his role in a voter fraud scandal involving
Working Families. A grand jury has indicted Troy City Councilman
Michael LoPorto and county Democratic Elections Commissioner Edward
G. McDonough for forging and possessing absentee ballots in an
attempt to win a Working Families Party ballot line.
In 2010, Brooklyn resident Patrick Crooks told the New York Post he was encouraged to
falsify names and addresses on petitions to toughen the city’s rent
regulations. “I saw that everyone else was doing it and my field
manager was encouraging it,” he told the Post. “It just didn’t seem right to
me.” The party was the target of a lengthy federal and state
investigation into its campaign practices that finally concluded
that—despite clear irregularities—no laws had been broken.
Laura Flanders, an independent left-wing journalist, reported
that WFP organizer Nelini Stamp has “been here [at Occupy Wall
Street] since day one.” She quoted Stamp as saying the protests are
aimed at “trying to change the capitalist system” and bringing
“revolutionary changes to the states.”
IN REALITY, I believe the OWS protests have a more immediate
goal: reelecting President Obama. When asked about the
demonstrations, White House senior adviser David Plouffe told ABC
News that “If you’re concerned about Wall Street and our financial
system, the president is standing on the side of consumers and the
middle class.”
Indeed, how could Obama not stand with the Occupy Wall Street
crowd? As a proud community organizer he ran a voter registration
project for Project Vote, an arm of ACORN, in the early 1990s. He
went on to become one of the group’s top trainers in Chicago and
also to serve as its lawyer in a key voting rights case. “I’ve been
fighting alongside of ACORN on issues you care about my entire
career,” he told ACORN’s leaders in a speech in 2007, as he began
his campaign for president. “You will have a seat at the
table….We’re going to be calling on all of you in to help us shape
the agenda.”
Given his cratering approval numbers and his consequent need to
revive support from his base, it wouldn’t surprise me if Obama’s
White House has decided to call in his old ACORN buddies to help
him implement his reelection agenda. Perhaps OWS really stands for
Obama Will Survive.