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Kucinich brings liberal, spiritual, long-shot presidential bid to town

The Seattle Times published an article about Kucinich in response to his campaign visit to Seattle. The article seems to mostly be about an interview the Times had with Kucinich rather than coverage of his campaign appearance. It's a good interview, though I was disappointed that the Times didn't provide coverage of the appearance. Since the other local paper, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, didn't mention Kucinich at all (I wrote them a letter to the editor, which they had the grace to publish), there wasn't really any media coverage of the event at all.

Follow the extended entry link to read the article.

Sunday, July 20, 2003 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M.

Kucinich brings liberal, spiritual, long-shot presidential bid to town

By Bob Young
Seattle Times staff reporter

During a campaign swing through Seattle yesterday, Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich made it clear where he stands among the nine Democratic presidential hopefuls: at the left end of the lineup.

Kucinich, the former "boy mayor" of Cleveland, is a vegan, a fervent critic of the Iraq war, a supporter of same-sex marriages and Ralph Nader's favorite Democratic candidate for president.

He wants to create a federal Department of Peace, a universal health-care system like Canada's, and new trade policies after withdrawing from NAFTA, the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Kucinich has won endorsements from Willie Nelson and Mahatma Gandhi's grandson, not to mention Ben Cohen (of Ben and Jerry's ice-cream fame) and Ben Affleck (of J-Lo fame).

He garnered praise at several Seattle events yesterday for his unconventional views, which were sprinkled with terms such as "holistic" and "metaphysical."

"I like the fact he's coming from a different place altogether. He has a vision of politics and society that's coming from the heart," said Noah Skocilich, a student who came from Spokane to hear Kucinich speak at a University District church yesterday.

Kucinich talked to supporters about yoga and spiritual author Carlos Castaneda, but he also is known to enjoy bowling and polka and carries a 1965 baseball card of Cleveland slugger Rocky Colavito in his wallet.

"He is very concerned about working-class issues. He is the real thing when you talk about grass-roots politics," said Seattle City Councilman Nick Licata, a Cleveland native who marched in Seattle's streets with Kucinich during the 1999 WTO protests.

Kucinich's presidential bid is considered a long shot because he lacks name recognition and campaign money. He has collected $1.7 million, according to the most recent campaign records. Rivals such as John Kerry, John Edwards and Howard Dean have received more than $10 million each.

Kucinich told audiences yesterday about his humble roots. His father was a trucker and struggled to pay the rent. His family sometimes lived in a car. Kucinich was ridiculed in school for having just one pair of pants to wear.

He lived on his own at the age of 17, was elected to the City Council at 23, and at 32 became the youngest mayor of a major American city.

His tenure lasted just two years. He angered Cleveland's business leaders with his combative style and his signature issue: He refused to sell the city-owned electric utility, Muny Light, to banks the city had borrowed money from.

So the city defaulted on loans, and Kucinich was defeated in his re-election bid by George Voinovich, now a U.S. senator.

"It was shattering," Kucinich said in an interview yesterday.

Kucinich tried stints as a teacher, political consultant and TV reporter. "I was scrambling. I know what it's like to have the roof fall in," he said. "I went from mayor to someone who couldn't get a job because I took on the business establishment. That enlarged my capacity for compassion."

Fifteen years later, he got back into the electoral arena after the Cleveland City Council proclaimed him a hero for helping consumers by refusing to sell Muny Light.

In his four terms in Congress, Kucinich has amassed a near-perfect voting record with the AFL-CIO and the liberal Americans for Democratic Action. Last week, Nader said he is urging Democrats to vote for Kucinich in primaries.

But Kucinich has a potential problem with some Democratic voters: Until a year ago he staunchly opposed abortion, and his voting record earned him the lowest rating — zero — from NARAL Pro-Choice America, plus the scorn of some feminists.

In the past year, however, Kucinich reversed his position and now states that, if president, he would nominate to the Supreme Court only judges who supported the Roe vs. Wade pro-choice ruling.

Kucinich explains his turnaround this way: "I had an evolution in my thinking on abortion, which came together last summer. A woman can't be free without the right to choose. Anyone who wants to lead this country has to keep an open heart and I think I have."

Rebecca Kilpatrick of Bellingham said she was skeptical about Kucinich's shift until she heard him explain it. Now she's convinced he's sincere and "the most progressive candidate."

Also convinced is a group called "Feminists for Kucinich," which includes Grace Paley, the poet laureate of Vermont, the home state of Dean, Kucinich's chief rival for the affection of the party's left wing.

Licata said he is supporting Kucinich in large part because of his strong stance against the Iraq war — he is the only member of Congress running for president who voted against the Bush administration's resolution authorizing the use of force in Iraq.

But, Licata admits he has a "political reality streak" and could see himself backing Dean if Kucinich's dark-horse campaign falters.

"The more support Kucinich gets, the better for the Democratic Party," Licata added. "He bolsters the courage of the other candidates. The greatest thing about Dennis Kucinich is that he does speak up."

As for Kucinich, he assesses his chances by pulling out his Colavito card and recalling the day when the Cleveland star clouted four home runs in a single game.

"It tells me the importance of paying attention to the moment. I can hit a home run each moment if I remember what Rocky did."

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About Me

I am an American-born convert to Islam and work in tech support in Seattle. Home page: Al-Muhajabah's Islamic Pages

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