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Friday, January 19, 2007

The Contenders: Dennis Kucinich

posted by on January 19 at 14:50 PM

Sure, November 2008 is nearly two years away, but it’s apparently never too early to declare one’s intention to run for president, and thus it’s never too early to get to know the people who might be the next leader of the free world. This month we’ll be taking a brief look at them.

DKucinich.jpg

Dennis Kucinich

Party: Democratic

Age: 61

Status: Declared

http://kucinich.us

Go ahead, call Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinish a tinfoil hatter. A lot of people do. But here’s where he stands on the issues: He’s the only prospective presidential candidate to have voted against the Patriot Act, he’s for gay marriage, he’s for decriminalizing marijuana, he’s for bringing troops home from Iraq now, he’s a supporter of Roe v. Wade, and he favors universal healthcare.

Oh, and he hangs out with Sean Penn and friends:

Kucinich was born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1946. His father was a truck-driver, and the Kucinich family had moved 21 times by the time Dennis was 17. The oldest of 7 children, Kucinich was the first in his family to go to college. He graduated from Case Western Reserve University in 1973. He was elected to the Cleveland City Council in 1970 at the age of 23, and then elected as Mayor of Cleveland in 1977, at the age of 31.

His mayoral tenure was turbulent, and Kucinich garnered national attention for refusing to sell the city’s failing municipal electrical company, which landed the city in big financial trouble. Partly due to the unpopularity of this decision, Kucinich was defeated for re-election in 1979. Kucinich now uses this incident as proof of his strength in standing up to big business.

After laying low from politics during the 1980’s, Kucinich returned to Ohio to run a successful campaign for state senate in 1994. In 1996, he was elected as a U.S. Congressman representing Ohio’s 10th District and has been re-elected four times since. He ran (very unsuccessfully) for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2004.

He is vegan.

Kucinich has been married three times. He has a daughter with his second wife, and is currently married to Elizabeth Harper, a British citizen. During the 2004 campaign, he was a bachelor and was quoted as saying:

As a bachelor, I get a chance to fantasize about my first lady. And you know maybe Fox will want to sponsor it as a national contest or something. But in any event I would want definitely want someone who would not just be there by my side, but be a working partner because I think we’re in a day in age when partnerships are imperative to making anything happening in the world. And I certainly want a dynamic, out-spoken woman who was fearless in her desire for peace in the world and for universal single-payer health care and a full employment economy. If you are out there call me.

(With help from super-star intern Sage Van Wing)

Previously: John Edwards, John McCain, Bill Richardson, Mitt Romney, Hillary Clinton, Rudy Giuliani, Barack Obama, Sam Brownback, Christopher J. Dodd, and Newt Gingrich.

RSS icon Comments

1

Well, now that all the other candidates have positions similar to his, he's still got no chance in heck. Just sayin'.

Posted by Will in Seattle | January 19, 2007 3:07 PM
2

Having grown up in Cleveland during the reign of Dennis the Menace, I have to point out that the vegan wonder really did stand up to the rapacious utilities when he refused to sell Muni Light (the municipal electric generating plant). The reason the city went into default was that the local bankers threatened to call their loans if Kucinich didn't agree to the sale--he didn't, so they pushed the city into bankruptcy. They could have bankrupted the city under previous Mayor Ralph Perk but didn't because Perk had signed off on the Muni Light sale. It's a long story (obviously), but the Wikipedia bio of Kucinich has a pretty good rundown.

Posted by J.R. | January 19, 2007 3:12 PM
3

Thanks for FINALLY posting something on Kucinich (albeit at 3pm on Friday afternoon).

But I'd like a clarification, please. What does "He ran for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2004, coming in dead last in electoral votes" mean?

There aren't electoral votes at party nominating conventions. Perhaps you mean delegates? If so, Kucinich had more delegates than Sharpton, Lieberman, Gephardt and Moseley Braun.

Also, you should've provided a link to a photo of his wife. She's pretty hot!

Posted by DOUG. | January 19, 2007 3:13 PM
4

I thought this was supposed to be about presidential candidates.

Posted by Fnarf | January 19, 2007 3:23 PM
5

I though Carol Mosely Brown gave him a run for his money, IMHO.

Posted by Will in Seattle | January 19, 2007 3:48 PM
6

Please note that Kucinich was one of the most steadfast ANTI-choice votes in the House until about 4 minutes before he ran for president in 2004; that, as a Cleveland city council member in the 1970s, he pandered to whites trying to keep their schools and neighborhoods from integration; and that Cleveland's municipal default cost its taxpayers - regular, ordinary people - many millions of dollars from the city's poor credit rating for years, not to mention the jobs lost as businesses fled the city.

But I'll say this for him: He's a strong Democrat, and refused to flirt with Nader or the Greens.

Posted by JTR | January 19, 2007 3:58 PM
7

None of that matters, because Kucinich is at best a one-percent candidate and thus not a real candidate. He's below Goddamn Al Sharpton on the depth chart. NOT A PLAYER. So why is he here?

Posted by Fnarf | January 19, 2007 4:13 PM
8

Can you honestly call Kucinich a contender? I mean, I love him, I think he's the most qualified man for the job, but given my political leanings, that means he doesn't have a chance in hell.

Posted by Gitai | January 19, 2007 4:24 PM
9

@3

Thanks, good point, I've fixed that thing about electoral votes.

Posted by Eli Sanders | January 19, 2007 4:49 PM
10

I hear you Gital. Going purely by his policy positions, he is more closely aligned with my views than any other candidate (ironically, he is closest also to the stated positions of The Stranger, despite their constant dissing of him). The fact that he is completely unelectable, and will never broach 10% in any primary election makes me a bit sad. But honestly, much as I agree with his open endorsement of full gay marriage rights and decriminalization of marijuana, these views will kill any chances he has of winning.

Still, I might vote for him in the primary anyway. I suspect there are probably quite a few Dems that secretly support gay marriage and decriminalization of pot, but are too chicken shit to actually say so in public, fearing it would be political suicide (and no doubt a few Dems that secretly hate gays as much as the Jezuz freaks do). Kucinich deserves some credit for standing up for some unpopular positions, and not selling out to the Greens.

I love him as a Senator, and think it'd be great if he was our Senator instead of Cantwell. But unfortunately I don't think he has a snowball's chance in hell of ever being president.

I'm glad he's running, though. I think it is important that Dems remember that there are some of us out there still who are way left of center (as the Dems move farther and farther to the right). Gives us lefties someone to cheer for besides the totally loopy Greens.

Posted by SDA in SEA | January 19, 2007 5:01 PM
11

Gee thanks, Eli, but you just couldn't keep from editorializing, could you? Your obvious distain for Kucinich is baffling to me.

Posted by DOUG. | January 19, 2007 5:08 PM
12

SDA in SEA

you can't love him as a senator because he isn't a senator, he's a congressman.

did you mean to say, I "would love him as a senator"?

Posted by truthseeker | January 19, 2007 7:15 PM
13

Why is it that I laugh a little whenever someone mentions Kucinich.

Posted by Giffy | January 19, 2007 7:29 PM
14

Although Cleveland's municipal default DID cost thousands of ordinary folks, it is arguable that selling the electric company for pennies would have cost them more, and would in fact still be costing them. The villain there is the system under which local governments have to beg the banks for financing, not the perfidy of elected officials in occasionally standing up to their more outrageous demands.

We did an article on Kucinich at www.blackagendareport.com a few weeks ago in which we called him the "blackest candidate in the race" because his votes match the will of black voters, as far as polls are able to discern them, more accurately than most members of the Congressional Black Caucus.

Still, he winds up supporting whoever the Democratic nominee is, and keeping left Democrats from thinking about operating outside the party structure. Maybe that is his REAL job.

Posted by Bruce Dixon | January 20, 2007 1:44 PM
15

I have little issue with Kucinich himself since he's a team player who provides an important voice in the Presidential campaign debate.

His more-progressive-than-thou supporters are a different matter...

Posted by Aexia | January 20, 2007 2:28 PM
16

Unrelated but somewhat interesting: My friend Tim was at a Wilco concert in Cleveland and saw Dennis Kucinich. His wife was sitting in his lap and they were making out hardcore.

Posted by Meryl | January 20, 2007 8:45 PM

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