Bill Ayers had been in the news again lately after agreeing to be interviewed by Fox’s Megyn Kelly this week. This brings up one of the most contested issues from the 2008 race when Democrats insisted Obama had only a passing familiarity with former domestic terrorist Ayers and Republicans insisted there was more to it. You can see the most recent example of this ongoing debate in the clip below.

While Republicans and Democrats have argued endlessly about Ayers and Obama’s personal relationship, few have mentioned the clear financial relationship between the two men. Back in 2008 I was able to document nearly $2 million dollars in grants directed to Bill Ayers’ Small Schools Workshop from boards on which Barack Obama sat, including the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, the Joyce Foundation and the Woods Fund. Here’s an example of what I found:

There’s much more like that listed here. As you can see, those same foundations directed just over $750,000 to an educational organization run by Ayers’ brother. Finally, there was a separate $1.5 million grant to redesign Chicago high schools along the lines being promoted by Ayers’ organization. It’s not a stretch to say that Obama helped fund Bill Ayers’ vision for Chicago area schools. As I wrote back in 2008:

All in all that’s a not insignificant contribution to the Ayers
family and their causes, certainly enough to rebut claims by the NY
Times
that the two men merely “crossed paths.” Barack Obama, more than
any other individual one could name, funded Bill Ayers’ goals in
Chicago.

Of course one might argue that Barack Obama was only one member of
both the Joyce Foundation and Woods Fund boards. But clearly, the giving
paints a picture of a relationship between Obama and Ayers that goes
way beyond “a guy from my neighborhood.” To put it another way, if
Barack Obama didn’t know who Bill Ayers was during this period, he was
an extremely irresponsible board member.

It might be believable that Obama and Ayers relationship was limited to promoting improvement in education. But it surely strains credibility that someone who helped direct this much money to Ayers’ projects over a period of six years and who apparently shared office space with him for three of those years, didn’t know him very well. Bill Ayers was not just another guy from the neighborhood, nor was he just another one of 10,000 people Obama knew (as Ayers claims below). In fact Obama was possibly Ayers’ biggest patron.