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Kucinich ponders hitting the road
Politico ^ | May 15, 2011 | Erika Lovley

Posted on 05/15/2011 3:42:15 PM PDT by Second Amendment First

Not long ago, Rep. Dennis Kucinich was championing the anti-war movement on the presidential stage with the likes of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.

But now, the die-hard liberal who launched his 30-year career on a high note as the “boy mayor of Cleveland” has become something of a political outlaw on the hunt for a new House district reportedly as far west as Washington state and as far north as Maine.

It’s a moment brought on by a set of circumstances ranging from dreary to bizarre.

The anti-war movement has almost disappeared. He’s bracing to be redistricted out of his beloved Cleveland district. The biggest platform he’s had recently is Comedy Central, where he performed a semi-professional ventriloquist act on an episode of “The Daily Show.” To add insult to injury, he is still widely lampooned for suing the House cafeteria over an olive pit that cracked his tooth and cost him dearly in medical bills.

Former aides and foes alike say he’s a character whose lifelong eccentricities make his current predicament not so unlikely.

“Dennis is not a conventional politician in any way,” said 2004 deputy national campaign manager Tim Carpenter, who currently heads Progressive Democrats of America. “When you use a traditional measuring stick, yes, he’s been outside the norm.”

While Kucinich, 64, has remained mum about his exact plans, there’s speculation he may try to recoup a House seat by following a population shift out West. Based on the last census, Washington is adding a district while Ohio is losing two. In an email to supporters, Kucinich said he’s been approached by supporters from “Washington to Maine.”

While calling stories about his potential move to Washington mere “speculation,” Kucinich didn’t deny that invitations have picked up since news of the redistricting broke.

Less than two weeks ago, he spoke to a standing-room-only crowd of nearly 800 in Washington. He said he’s received a steady stream of invitations from labor, environmental, political and other groups.

“The thing I won’t do is wake up the day after the Ohio map is revealed and suddenly be in shock and say, ‘Oh what do I do now.’ I don’t live that way. I don’t see myself as a victim. I reject that,” he said. “This is nothing to cry about.”

And if he doesn’t move to a new state, the redistricted map could very well pit him against a fellow Ohio Democrat — a race his friends say he’d be too noble to jump into.

“As someone who spent a lifetime challenging corrupt utilities and insurance companies, I’m not exactly the Republicans’ favorite Democrat,” he said, ruefully. “I’m aware of that reality, but I’m not complaining. There’s a specific effort to eliminate my presence in the U.S. Congress.”

The speculation already has a state newspaper referring to Kucinich as a “carpetbagger” and has state Republicans snarling.

“This, apparently, is his final meltdown,” said Washington State GOP Chairman Kirby Wilbur. “I would love to have him on the ballot out here. We welcome him with open arms. He is so far left, I could beat him with any Republican candidate.”

If Kucinich stays in Ohio, he would already have competition: Cuyahoga County Republican Chairman Rob Frost recently announced his campaign, suggesting the Comedy Central stint may have “subconsciously” had something to do with it. Kucinich won his seventh term with 53 percent of the vote in 2010.

“It’s possible, subconsciously, that that interview started the seed of the idea for me,” Frost said. “Sideshow Dennis. It’s hard to say what’s odd for him anymore. I don’t plan to attack him because I think he’s drawn his own criticisms.”

The reliable liberal irks Democrats, too, even in his home state.

“I hope at some point Dennis would pick up the phone and tell us something,” said Cuyahoga County Democratic Party Chairman Stuart Garson, who expressed frustration over rumors that the congressman may leave the state. “I guess it’s the culture we’re in. Nobody trusts anyone to keep a secret anymore.”

Over the years, Kucinich has been associated with a number of peculiar stories, including when he said during a 2007 presidential debate that he had seen an unidentified flying object.

Most members of Congress have refused to give interviews about Kucinich’s more recent antics. Even members of his own delegation won’t discuss the potential redistricting matter.

“Congressman Jim Renacci is focused on his own district and doesn’t have a comment on the political decisions of other members of the delegation,” said Karin Davenport, spokeswoman for the Ohio Republican.

Kucinich is no stranger to unpopular moves. Earlier this year, he was a lone voice in the wind when he called the president’s decision to bomb Libya an “impeachable” offense.

“He’s a special kind of irritant to the GOP and sometimes his own party because he’s not afraid to tell the truth,” said David Kelly, a longtime friend and former gubernatorial running mate of Kucinich.

Even some of his closest friends on the left worry about the vote he cast in favor of Obama’s health care plan, especially after he spent years fighting for a single-payer system.

“He did take a hit when he voted for the health care bill. I think a lot of base was upset,” said Vin Gopal, Kucinich’s 2008 deputy campaign manager.

Kucinich said he weighed the risk.

“I went to the Capitol and sat in the rotunda thinking about the decision,” he said of the day before the health care vote. “I was determined that the only hope for fundamental reform was to look at this as just a first step, no matter how flawed it may be.”

In an interview with POLITICO, Kucinich denied that his current situation adds up to a bad year, even though the infamous olive pit incident was “a nightmare.”

“The difficult year was over a period of a couple years, dealing with endless visits to dentists to try to save a tooth,” Kucinich said. “Occasionally in life, I have [had] to take a stand for myself. I was acting not as a member of Congress but [as] a private citizen. I don’t give up my rights because I’m a member of Congress.”

As for the Comedy Central appearance with a puppet — Kucinich says his critics are simply political “stiffs.”

“To analyze that in terms of long-standing political impact is to miss the joke,” he said. “If people in public life don’t have a sense of humor, this is a pretty dark and dismal place.”


TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Ohio; US: Washington
KEYWORDS: denniskucinich; kucinich; paulkucinich12
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To: jazusamo
Stay out of WA state, Dennis, we’ve enough liberal Kooks here already.

Boy! Howdy! I have them in my family. I think nearly everyone has them in their families.

41 posted on 05/15/2011 4:45:11 PM PDT by Parmy
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To: Parmy

I hear you! We do also and like you say, there’s few without them.


42 posted on 05/15/2011 4:54:40 PM PDT by jazusamo (His [Obama's] political base---the young, the left and the thoughtless: Thomas Sowell)
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To: Mr. K

I read that she is far more Conservative than the Elf on many issues. If she bails on Dennis, this could be another GOP pick-up.


43 posted on 05/15/2011 4:55:41 PM PDT by Lazlo in PA (Now living in a newly minted Red State.)
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To: Second Amendment First

“The thing I won’t do is wake up the day after the Ohio map is revealed and suddenly be in shock and say, ‘Oh what do I do now.’ I don’t live that way. I don’t see myself as a victim. I reject that,” he said. “This is nothing to cry about.”

Bwaaa. It is always all about the politicians, not the voters. The victims are those people of Ohio whose state went down the tubes while represented by this guy. He has no district because nobody wants to live in it.


44 posted on 05/15/2011 5:13:24 PM PDT by rod1
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To: Second Amendment First
We can only hope..


45 posted on 05/15/2011 5:55:08 PM PDT by maddog55 (OBAMA: Why stupid people shouldn't vote.)
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To: Second Amendment First

Career politician in search of a liberal congressional district so he can continue his “career” afer Ohio loses a seat.

I may just puke.


46 posted on 05/15/2011 6:26:54 PM PDT by Tupelo
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To: Lazlo in PA
I read that she is far more Conservative than the Elf on many issues. If she bails on Dennis, this could be another GOP pick-up.

Man, that is funny!

47 posted on 05/15/2011 6:44:53 PM PDT by Always A Marine
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To: Second Amendment First

Paging Hillary Clinton, Paging Hillary Clinton....


48 posted on 05/15/2011 7:08:15 PM PDT by bkopto (Obama is merely a symptom of a more profound, systemic disease in American body politic.)
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To: Lazlo in PA

With a wife like that, Dennis can’t be all bad.


49 posted on 05/15/2011 8:36:02 PM PDT by driftless2
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