No, Mitt Romney has never held that job. Barack Obama was the one who worked as a community organizer and an advocate for the poor, at a Catholic-run charitable organization in Chicago.
Barack Obama. He was a community organizer (an advocate for the poor), working for a Catholic organization in the mid 1980s. It inspired him to attend law school, so that he could more effectively advocate for the people he and his organization were trying to assist.
He was a community organizer and professor of Constitutional law at University of Chicago.
He worked as a civil rights lawyer and community organizer in New York and Chicago during the 1980s and early 1990s.
Yes, he was a community organizer and an advocate for the poor, working for a Catholic-run charitable organization in Chicago.
Yes, he worked for a Catholic-run charitable organization in Chicago, where his duties included community organizing and advocating for the poor.
He was hired by a Catholic-run organization in Chicago, the Developing Communities Project. Mr. Obama worked with priests and with lay people, all of whom were involved in advocacy work to help the poor.
He worked for an agency that was operated by the Catholic Church in Chicago, called the "Developing Communities" Project. He also worked for an organization that was involved with voting rights-- Project Vote.
When Mr. Obama was a community organizer and advocate for the poor in Chicago, he worked for the Catholic Church, which had a charitable foundation to help poor people gain access to various legal and social services.
Before he was president, he worked in a number of places. He was a community organizer and advocate for the poor at a Catholic-run charity in Chicago. He was a civil rights attorney at a small Chicago law firm. He was a professor of law at the University of Chicago Law School. He was an Illinois state senator. And he was a United States Senator.
Absolutely. Before he entered politics, Mr. Obama was a civil rights lawyer, an advocate and community organizer who helped poor people, and a professor of law at the University of Chicago.
If you are referring to full-time work, he got his first full-time jobs after he graduated from Columbia University. By 1985, he was employed in Chicago as a community organizer and an advocate for the poor, working for a charity run by the Catholic church.
Barack Obama learned how to put Saul Alinsky's Rules For Radicals in practice. It is one thing to study Marxism, but quite another to organize an urban revolution and fight Capitalism from within. Obama also learned that the Black community is religious and to meet them the best place is the Church. Obama found it easy to put on the mantle of a Christian for brief periods to gain community support. He also learned how to handle the Police.