Palmer began her teaching career in Indianapolis then moved to Chicago to teach at
Malcolm X College, one of the
City Colleges of Chicago. While working on her degree at
Northwestern University, Palmer co-authored two books and tutored. She then took a position at Northwestern as Associate Dean and Director of African American Student Affairs for five years. Palmer became involved in a national voter education movement, then founded the Chicago YMCA Youth and Government Program in 1986. In addition, she was executive director of Chicago Cities in Schools. In the late-1980s, she was on the board of the Chicago Committee in Solidarity with Southern Africa, an
anti-apartheid group.
Illinois Senate Palmer was appointed to the Illinois State Senate in June 1991 to fill the remainder of the term of longtime State Senator Richard J. Newhouse, Jr., who had retired. She successfully ran for election in 1992 and served a four-year term that ended on January 8, 1997. While in the Illinois State Senate, Palmer initially served on the committees for Appropriations, Commerce and Economic Development, Elementary and Secondary Education and Higher Education, rising to vice chairperson of Commerce and Economic Development. Later in her tenure, she served on the State Government Operations- and the Economic and Fiscal Commissions, and was a member of the Legislative Bureau and the Legislative Information Systems committee.
1995 U.S. House campaign In July 1995, seven months after launching an exploratory fundraising committee for a U.S. congressional run, Palmer announced she would run to replace U.S. Representative
Mel Reynolds who was then under indictment for sex crimes. She also said that she would not seek reelection to the Illinois State Senate in 1996. Shortly afterward, Barack Obama, who had never held political office to-date, launched his campaign committee for Palmer's Illinois State Senate seat. Following Reynolds' conviction and resignation from the U.S. House in August 1995, a special election primary was set for November 1995 to replace Reynolds. In September 1995, Palmer supporters held a press conference asking other announced and rumored candidates to drop out to allow Palmer to run in the special primary without opposition. On September 19, 1995,
Barack Obama formally announced his candidacy for the state senate, with Palmer introducing and endorsing Obama as her successor, according to multiple accounts. According to
The New Yorker, Palmer's endorsement "brought with it two organizational assets: local operators and local activists". On November 28, 1995, after finishing a distant third behind
Jesse Jackson, Jr. in the primary to replace Reynolds, Palmer remarked that she still would not seek re-election to the state senate. However, Palmer changed her mind and filed nominating petitions with 1,580 signatures on December 18, 1995, the last day for filing. That day, Obama told the
Chicago Tribune, "I am disappointed that she's decided to go back on her word to me." In early January 1996, Obama challenged Palmer's petitions and those of the three other prospective Democratic candidates. Nearly two-thirds of the signatures on Palmer's petitions were found to be invalid, leaving her almost 200 signatures short of the required 757 signatures of registered voters residing in the Illinois Senate district. None of the other three prospective candidates had the required number of valid signatures. As a result, Obama, who had filed nominating petitions with over 3,000 signatures on the first filing day, appeared alone on the ballot for the March 16 Democratic primary. This assured him of election in this heavily Democratic district. He easily defeated the Republican and
Harold Washington Party candidates in the November general election. In a 2007 interview with the
Chicago Tribune, Obama said that the challenges were justified by obvious flaws in the signature sheets.
Later career After leaving public office, Palmer became an associate professor in the
College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs at the
University of Illinois at Chicago, and she was a special assistant to the president of the university before retiring. Palmer endorsed
Hillary Clinton during the
2008 Democratic Party presidential primaries. She was reportedly a key supporter of
Danny Davis in his
2011 run for mayor of Chicago against
Rahm Emanuel. ==Death==