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What America Lost When Dennis Kucinich Lost

by John Nichols

TheNation.com Blog
March 7, 2012 - 12:26 AM ET

http://www.thenation.com/blog/166641/what-america-lost-when-dennis-kucinich-lost

Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich, a two-time presidential
candidate who for the past decade has been the most
consistent critic of war and militarism in the US House of
Representatives, was defeated Tuesday in a Democratic
primary that pitted him against fellow progressive Marcy
Kaptur.

Kucinich was the first electoral victim of the current round
of redistricting, which saw congressional districts redrawn
in states across the country after the 2010 Census. A
Republican governor and legislature carved up northern Ohio
districts with an eye toward eliminating at least one
Democratic seat, and they achieved their goal by forcing
Kucinich and Kaptur into the same district.

That district favored Kaptur and, after a hard-fought race
she prevailed by a fifty-six to thirty-nine margin, with the
remainder going to a third candidate.

Though the race in Ohio's 9th District received scant
attention compared with the Republican presidential contest
in the state, the result will have national consequences.

A Congress without Dennis Kucinich will be a lesser branch.
It's not just that the loss of the former leader of the
Congressional Progressive Caucus will rob the House of its
most consistent critic of wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and
Libya, and one its steadiest critics of corporate power.

Since he arrived on the Hill in 1997, Kucinich has been one
of a handful of absolutely engaged members. When issues have
arisen, be it domestic or international, low profile or
high, Kucinich has been at the ready - often with the first
statement, the strongest demand and the boldest plan.

A master of parliamentary procedure, and a Constitutional
purist, Kucinich has given Democratic and Republican
congressional leaders their share of headaches. And he has
been more than willing to break with Democratic and
Republican presidents on matters of principle. But even as
he frustrated the most powerful players in Washington,
Kucinich won an enthusiastic base of supporters who backed
him for the Democratic presidential nominations in 2004 and
2008.

Though he never got near the nomination in either year,
Kucinich earned high marks for forcing the other contenders
to address fundamental issues of war and peace, civil
liberties and trade policy. At the same time, he remained
sufficiently in touch with his blue-collar Cleveland-area
district - turf that had previously elected a Republican - to
keep his seat in the face of primary and general election
challenges from candidate backed by the political and media
elites that had been after Kucinich since his days as the
uncompromising "boy mayor" of Cleveland.

Had his district remained intact, Kucinich would have won
Tuesday's primary. But the 2010 election put Republican
Governor John Kasich and his conservative allies in charge
of the Ohio redistricting process. With encouragement from
House Speaker John Opener's, they targeted Kucinich from the
start. Everyone knew Kucinich was threatened, and the
congressman even entertained the prospect of moving to
Washington state, where he has long been a favorite of
progressive activists and where population shifts had
created an open seat that might be friendly to his
ambitions.

Ultimately, however, Kucinich opted for a race in a redrawn
Ohio district that included portions of his Cleveland base.
The district also included Toledo, the home of Congresswomen
Kaptur, a Democrat with whom Kucinich had frequently allied
over the years.

Kucinich and Kaptur have both served in Congress as
outsiders, members of the Progressive Caucus, with records
of opposing wars, free-trade deals and economic policies
that favor the 1 percent over the 99 percent. Both have 95
percent AFL-CIO records. Both have 100 percent ACLU records.

There were, to be sure, distinctions. Kucinich, who for many
years voted with opponents of reproductive rights, switched
his position before the 2004 presidential election and ran
this year as the more socially liberal contender. Kaptur,
the longest serving woman in the House and a champion of
many feminist causes, was ranked as a "mixed choice" by
NARAL Pro-Choice America.

Kucinich was always the purest anti-war champion, and he
made a point of highlighting that in the race with Kaptur, a
ranking member of the House Appropriations Committee, who
the Cleveland congressman argued should have done much more
to cut the Pentagon budget.

But Kaptur, who came to national prominence as an outspoken
foe of the 2008 bank bailout, emerged as a national hero of
union and community activists who shared her determination
to "bust the banksters." She was a star of the film
Capitalism, a Love Story, in which she told filmmaker
Michael Moore that the 2008 bailout was a "a financial coup
d'état."

Kaptur's boldness in opposing the big banks and Wall Street,
as well as her passionate advocacy on behalf organized
labor, would have been missed, as well, in a Congress that
needs all the economic populists it can get.

But losing Kucinich will be hard. In some of the toughest
days for the American experiment as a Republican
administration plotted to wage a war of whim in Iraq,
Democratic "leaders" stood down. It was Dennis Kucinich who
spoke up for peace and who kept speaking up with a
determination that gave hope to activists across the United
States and around the world.

The Republican mapmakers in Ohio may have drawn Dennis
Kucinich out of his district, and out of Congress. But they
will not draw him out of the history of these times. Indeed,
when the story of America in the first years of the 21st
century is told, Dennis Kucinich will be remembered as the
rare member of Congress who opposed wars that could not be
justified, who defended rights that could not be
surrendered, who demanded accountability from the presidents
and vice presidents who could not be allowed to have their
way with the republic.

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