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Robert Scheer

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Dennis Kucinich: Conscience of the Congress

Posted: 03/08/2012 3:27 am

"Dennis will be back, you can count on it; he's on the right side of things." I recall those words from a printer in Cleveland who had rented Dennis Kucinich a room in the back of her plant when that city's former "boy mayor" was living in suddenly reduced circumstances. He was as sanguine then as he was Tuesday night when I spoke with him by phone about his gerrymandered eviction from the U.S. House of Representatives. Although he had just lost the position he has held for eight terms, by the end of our conversation he was optimistic and promised to continue the fight: "I am not about to abandon what I stand for."

Most of the newly drawn district was made up of the Toledo home base of the fellow Democrat who defeated Kucinich in Tuesday's primary, Rep. Marcy Kaptur, his more conservative colleague in Ohio's congressional delegation. What remained of his Cleveland base, which he carried by 75 percent, was not sufficient to stave off the defeat the Republican-controlled state legislature had intended when it drew the new boundaries in response to Ohio's loss of two House seats. Kucinich knew it would be a tough primary fight, especially in the face of unexpected attack ads from his former friend in Congress.

With late returns still coming in Tuesday night, he was already thinking of new ways to energize the public discourse. I light-heartedly offered him a job writing a column for Truthdig paying in the low threes. But I was quick to add that I no longer had that spare studio in Los Angeles where he had spent four months writing a book after previously losing office. We're all downsizing these days -- unless you're a bailed-out banker like the successors of those who four decades ago forced Cleveland into bankruptcy and Kucinich from the mayor's office.

Back in 1979, I interviewed Mayor Kucinich for the Los Angeles Times, where I was working, and for Playboy. The Playboy interview caused him some discomfort with his solid base of Catholic voters, but they and other Clevelanders were warm to his populist instinct, the force that has driven him since his starkly impoverished youth. That populist passion caused him to rouse the ire of the banking elite that insisted that the city divest its municipal power plant to benefit a huge private power company.

When Kucinich refused to play ball with the downtown banking interests they pulled the plug on Cleveland finances and temporarily derailed his career. But 14 years later the Cleveland Plain Dealer, which has savaged him since his mayoral days, ran a headline conceding "Dennis Was Right" as it belatedly acknowledged that his refusal to sell the plant had provided needed competition to private power, resulting in lower energy costs for consumers.

Dennis early on made a choice to rise politically by faithfully representing his people rather than betraying them, as is the norm in politics. In our Playboy interview he made a joke concerning the criticism of all the idealistic young people who had joined him in administering Cleveland: "The real reason the young people I've appointed have been criticized is that they haven't learned to steal yet. If they learned to take bribes they'd be praised as innovative and bright."

So, too, Kucinich, who has been unfailingly resilient in advocating for the vulnerable, whether they were the working poor in his district or the folks our government bombed throughout the world. He was defeated this week by a fellow House member who prides herself on bringing home government bucks, particularly in defense expenditures. Her pitch to the voters was that her role on the House Appropriations Committee would help keep the pork barrel open, big-city Dem style.

Kucinich never competed in that way. He has been a national symbol of resistance to excessive government power and waste. He also has been a champion of social justice. His has been a rare voice, and one way or another it must continue to be heard. Simply put, when it came to the struggle for peace over war, Dennis was the conscience of the Congress. And he was always at the forefront in defending the rights of unionized workers who once formed the backbone of a solid middle class and who are now threatened with extinction.

Kucinich will surely be back for another turn in public life. As he put it in our Playboy interview:

"I appreciate Woody Allen's humor because one of my safety valves is an appreciation for life's absurdities. His message is that life isn't a funeral march to the grave. It's a polka."

Dance on, Dennis.

 
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10:28 PM on 03/09/2012
Dennis Kucinich needs to move to Maui where he got his highest vote total in his presidential run. The seat is open. The challenger is an anti-gay Mormon conservative who is not widely liked, and the seat was previously Patsy Mink's and Mazie Hirono's. The Republican opponent is token and insignificant (harsh, but true). And Maui has no problem with a fly-in candidate since practically everyone there flew in at one time or another. He would be a shoe-in, the electorate shares his priorities, and then he'd be next in line for a Senate seat.
10:43 AM on 03/09/2012
Here is yet another example of the people getting the government they deserve.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
ThatsTheTheWayItIs
religion, ideology, partisanship are delusional
09:52 AM on 03/09/2012
And Michelle Bachmann is the "conscience" of Repubs, but like Kucinich has zero influence. Because both are on the political fringe, which makes a lot of noise and can impede Congress, but never get anything accomplished because almost no one agrees with them, and their "conscience" doesn't allow them to compromise.

Politicians represent us, not their values. Ideology has no place in politics.
09:19 AM on 03/09/2012
Dennis ran racist campaigns from the time Carl Stokes was mayor of Cleveland. He never stood up for reproductive rights. He was a terrible mayor and barely survived a recall election one year into his (only) two-year term. He has never delivered anything to his voters. Voters want a rep who does something for them, not one traipsing the country for his ego and neglecting his constiuents.

He is a Tea Bagger of the left - populism with easy slogans and nothing of substance.

Democrat Kaptur won more than 90% of her voters plus overwhelming support in the new areas of the new district. They weren't Republican voters - they were blue collar folks who wanted a rep who pays attention to their needs - not his ego, who runs around the country including WA looking for new places to run.

Dennis can now look for a REAL job and see how the rest of us try to survive....
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intotheabyss
Imperialism is a form of insanity.
09:06 AM on 03/09/2012
Dennis is a patriot surrounded by faux patriots. He should wear the scorn of the 1% media as a badge of honor for they have none. The phonies and liars of this world will always ridicule truth tellers in order to cover up their misdeeds. Stay true to yourself Dennis. It will serve you and us well in the long run.
08:36 AM on 03/09/2012
Very good column and nice tribute to Dennis Kucinich. There were many voters in his "former" district who were surprised he was not on their ballot. Hopefully the Republicans will pay a price for their gerrymandering.
08:35 AM on 03/09/2012
According to Marcy Kaptur he's just another corrupt machine politician.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AsISaid
08:20 AM on 03/09/2012
Bernie Sanders = Batman

Dennis Kucinich = Robin
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tom Pumroy
practical dreamer-artist Man Ray
08:17 AM on 03/09/2012
I guess this leaves the congress without a conscience like the rest of government; where do we go from here?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ClarcKing
Citizen
07:46 AM on 03/09/2012
Let's start the revolution right here, Kucinich for President. We need this man, he fights.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PerryLogan
We don't want your guns; we just want your women.
05:52 AM on 03/09/2012
Then again, Dennis caved on the public option. That's when we learned the progressives in Congress were useless. :(
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stevedavis
08:07 AM on 03/09/2012
We learned progressives in congress were useless because his gerrymandered gadfly happened to take a convenient position? No, that certainly isn't what I learned.
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vrede
don't shoot me it's just my opinion
05:19 AM on 03/09/2012
Fewer and fewer intelligent, common sense, caring politicians. Means less democracy more totalitarianism. We are going backwards.
07:50 AM on 03/09/2012
sad but true
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Vballboy60
The Dudes abides...with the moderation
04:46 AM on 03/09/2012
Good and bad politicians always, eventually, fall by the wayside.

Congressman Kucinich will be missed. He was not afraid to ask if something smelled funny. He challenged many aspects of government and gave Americans time to ask ourselves why we need certain legislation or political path. He was what we call a progressive. He was aiming for a better tomorrow.

Reminds me of the late Paul Wellstone or older politicians like Sam Rayburn, Top O'Neill, and Daniel Moynihan. These elected represenatives often asked simple questions like why and why not instead of pushing through special interest legislation without debate. That is what America needs.
We need Congressional representatives who decline large single donations of special interest money and always asks if all aspects of legislation benefits We the people.
03:45 AM on 03/09/2012
Thanks Mr .Scheer,when it comes to economy and war Mr. Kucinich and you both have been consistent on the right side of the history.
HopeWFaith
We the People
12:42 AM on 03/09/2012
Great article. Thanks!