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Paul David Wellstone - How the rural poor got power: narrative of a grass-roots organizer

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Before he was a senator, before he was a nationally known advocate for the disenfranchised and a tireless supporter of public policies to alleviate poverty, Paul Wellstone devoted his time and legendary energy to grassroots organizing. How the Rural Poor Got Power describes Wellstones experiences as a political activist in rural Minnesota. Working with senior citizens, struggling farmers, and single mothers, Wellstone created a coalition to address transportation, access to health care, and welfare benefits issues. This narrative features interviews with citizens and shows Wellstone observing and participating in the ideals to which he devoted his life: helping poor people gain a political voice. Paul Wellstone (1944-2002) was professor of political science at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota, and worked as a political organizer before being elected to the Senate in 1990. His untimely death in a plane crash during the 2002 election galvanized public interest in his vision for progressive politics. His work, ideas, and beliefs are described in The Conscience of a Liberal, available in paperback from the University of Minnesota Press.

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title How the Rural Poor Got Power Narrative of a Grass-roots Organizer - photo 1

title:How the Rural Poor Got Power : Narrative of a Grass-roots Organizer
author:Wellstone, Paul David.
publisher:University of Massachusetts Press
isbn10 | asin:0870232495
print isbn13:9780870232497
ebook isbn13:9780585314235
language:English
subjectPolitical participation--Minnesota--Rice Co, Rice County (Minn.)--Politics and government, Rural poor--Minnesota--Rice Co, Organization for a Better Rice County.
publication date:1978
lcc:JS451.M69R58 1978eb
ddc:320.9/776/555
subject:Political participation--Minnesota--Rice Co, Rice County (Minn.)--Politics and government, Rural poor--Minnesota--Rice Co, Organization for a Better Rice County.
Page i
How the Rural Poor Got Power
Narrative of a Grass-Roots Organizer
Paul David Wellstone
Page ii TO MY PARENTS MINNIE AND LEON WELLSTONE Copyright 1978 by Paul - photo 2
Page ii
TO MY PARENTS, MINNIE AND LEON WELLSTONE
Copyright 1978 by Paul David Wellstone
All rights reserved
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 77-22109
Printed in the United States of America
Designed by Mary Mendell
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data appear on the last page of the book.
Page iii
Contents
Preface
v
Introduction
vii
1. The Struggle for Recognition
1
Picture 3
Charles Liverseed
18
Picture 4
Therese Van Zuilen
25
2. Welfare Rights
33
Picture 5
Elgie Cloutier Butterfield
54
Picture 6
Francis Milligan
62
3. Beyond Welfare Rights
69
4. New Community Leaders
89
Picture 7
Phyllis Hanson
130
Picture 8
Patti Fritz
141
Picture 9
Isabelle Goodwin
147
Picture 10
Rusty Hanson
152
Picture 11
Franie Dwyer
161
5. Organizational Problems
167
6. Bread and Roses
195
Postscript
205
Notes
221

Page iv
Acknowledgments
I met some of the strongest, most determined, most inspirational people I've ever met in my life working with Organization for a Better Rice County. This book is about their work.
Professors Frances Fox Piven and Peter Bachrach were extremely generous with their time in reading, providing invaluable criticism, and supporting my work. I owe special thanks to Malcolm Call, Carol Schoen, and Leone Stein at the University of Massachusetts Pressit has been a fine experience working with them.
Much of this book was written while I worked with the Center for Community Change in Washington, D.C. The staff of the Center, in particular Bruce Hanson, gave me the necessary encouragement.
Sheila Wellstone is a wonderful woman whose support I will always appreciate.
Page v
Preface
In his constantly instructive and cautionary The Open Society and Its Enemies, Karl Popper addresses himself, at the end of a long effort, to nothing less than history itself. He wonders what lessons one can learn from it, and shows, immediately after asking the question, that the very notion of "history" has to be questioned. We have been taught to think of history as a succession of power struggles: the reigns of kings and emperors, the years in which prime ministers and presidents held rule. Meanwhile, the lives of generation after generation of ordinary people go unnoticed, unrecorded, ignored by those scholars who present accounts, really, of a few all too celebrated figures in the name of a portrayal of man's past.
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