By W. James Antle, III on 12.27.07 @ 1:08AM
Fed up with his national ambitions and left-wing politics, Cleveland-area Democrats and Republicans are menacing Dennis.
Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and John Edwards may be the
Democratic frontrunners, but make no mistake: Liberal activists
love Dennis Kucinich. The editors of the Nation say the
long-shot presidential candidate "comes closest to embodying the
ideals of this magazine," celebrating the fact that "Kucinich has
used his presidential campaigns to champion issues like cutting the
military budget and abolishing nuclear weapons; universal,
single-payer healthcare; campaign finance reform; same-sex marriage
and an end to the death penalty and the war on drugs."
Ohio's Tenth Congressional District, which Kucinich has
represented for six terms, may be heavily Democratic but few of
those positions would poll well there. Faced with a congressman
whose interests and ideology increasingly lie outside the district,
some Cleveland natives are getting restless. "Who is minding the
store and doing my business in Washington while he is flittering
around the world?" Lakewood's George Stragisher memorably asked the
Cleveland Plain Dealer in late September.
As he campaigns in Iowa, Kucinich faces no fewer than five
opponents back home -- three of them current or former elected
officials. Both North Olmsted Mayor Tom O'Grady and ten-year
Cleveland City Councilman Joe Cimperman have jumped into the
Democratic primary, joining perennial candidate Barbara Ferris and
antiwar activist Rosemary Palmer.
"I'm running because I want results," Cimperman said in his
announcement speech earlier this month. "I'm tired of the rhetoric
and empty promises. I'm running for congressman because it's the
only job I want." While Kucinich describes himself to Hawaii
Democrats as "the aloha candidate," Cimperman uses a different
phrase: "out of touch."
The complaints from Kucinich's first declared Republican
challenger are similar. Jim Trakas, a former majority whip in the
Ohio House of Representatives -- and, in the interest of full
disclosure, an old friend and former boss during my stint at
Cuyahoga County Republican headquarters a decade ago -- also
questions the incumbent's effectiveness.
"I actually like Dennis personally," Trakas told TAS.
"He has a great Horatio Alger story. But when it comes to saving
steel companies and hospitals or just protecting jobs and economic
growth in the district, he really hasn't delivered. And I think
people are starting to wonder if he is the same Dennis they knew
and sent to Washington."
KUCINICH IS PERHAPS best known for his remarkable political
comeback after leading Cleveland into bankruptcy during his tenure
as the city's "Boy Mayor." (Trakas formally kicked off his campaign
on the anniversary of the city going into default.) Yet his
transformation from working-class favorite of lunch-bucket
Democrats to darling of the latte-sipping set has been almost as
noteworthy.
Since his election to Congress, Kucinich has moved to the left
on social issues. Shortly before his ill-fated 2004 presidential
bid, he flip-flopped from pro-life to pro-choice on abortion.
He went so far as to promise he would nominate any gay, lesbian or
transsexual person to the Supreme Court "as long as they were ready
to uphold Roe v. Wade."
In place of his past social conservatism, Kucinich now backs
legislation making Spanish a second official language of the United
States. He favors reparations to black Americans for slavery and to
Iraqis for the Iraq war. Kucinich would slash defense spending and
create a Cabinet-level Department of Peace.
Trakas points out that this liberal philosophy has pushed the
Democratic incumbent far from the mainstream on the war against
terror. Kucinich was the only member of Congress who voted against
a resolution remembering the victims of the 9/11 attacks, following
on the heels of his trip to Damascus for a visit with Syrian
President Bashar Assad.
Kucinich's local critics aren't impressed with his shuttle
diplomacy or national progressive leadership. Deborah Sutherland,
the Republican mayor of Bay Village, has called his presidential
campaign "a distraction." Parma Heights Mayor Marty Zanotti,
Cuyahoga County Commissioner Tim Hagan, and Parma Mayor Dean
DePiero, all Democrats, have questioned Kucinich's effectiveness as
a congressman. "I'm glad Dennis has significant opposition,"
Zanotti told Cleveland's WKYC. "I think he has taken the district
for granted."
WHETHER THE OPPOSITION is significant enough remains to be seen.
Kucinich defeated Barbara Ferris in the 2006 Democratic primary
with over 76 percent of the vote. He went on to win 66 percent
against Republican Mike Dovilla. After similar local complaints
about Kucinich's failed presidential bid in 2004, some observers --
including me -- wondered if Republican Ed Herman might
have a chance. Kucinich won easily, drawing 60 percent.
In the primary, the four challengers might split the
anti-Kucinich vote. In the general election, the Plain
Dealer's Brent Larkin recently argued that the GOP has no
chance to carry the district.
Seasoned opponents like O'Grady, Trakas, and Cimperman
nevertheless sense an opportunity against an incumbent who agrees
with the Nation more than his district and who is as
likely to campaign in Hawaii as Lakewood or Parma Heights. They
each hope to remind Kucinich that aloha can also mean goodbye.
topics:
Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Business, Abortion, Supreme Court, Military, Iraq, Conservatism, Nuclear Weapons