| Who Says Kucinich Doesn't Have A Chance.
Rob Kall, editor OpEdNews.com
Dennis Kucinich is my choice for Democratic candidate for president. He
beats all the others by light years when it comes to clearly defining
policies and positions that resonate with my politics. Most progressives I
talk to agree that he's the most progressive of the candidates. But they
almost all say he doesn't have a chance. A lot of them have heaved
themselves onto the Dean Juggernaut.
Now, I don't dislike Dean. I could vote for him. But it would be a
compromise. As one liberal colleague observed, you don't have to settle
with Kucinich. It's not a compromise, progressive politics-wise.
I'll cut to the chase on this article. Kucinich came in second in the
MoveOn.org primary. He beat out Kerry, Lieberman, Edwards, Gephart,
Graham, Mosely-Braun and Sharpton. During the voting in the primary,
my web-stats magic predicted, within less than one percent error,
that Dean would win and what percentage he'd win with. I took a fresh look
at those stats, which are based on the web activity of hundreds of
thousands of people-- not a few hundred, or a thousand, like most polls.
And Kucinich came in fourth. That puts him ahead of Lieberman, ahead of
Edwards and Graham-- three players who are seen as serious contenders.
I know. But Kucinich's recognition factor is really low. That's true.
But something interesting is going on here and it suggests that just like
Dean roared out of the bottom of the pile, Kucinich has more to his
campaign than meets the ordinary pollster's political eye.
He is beating three of the serious contenders and not far behind Kerry,
the other serious contender. The point is, the people who say that
Kucinich doesn't have a chance are wrong. He's already doing better on the
web, based on hundreds of thousands of people, than the candidates who the
beltway crowd predicted would be on top.
I just got word of another indictor that Kucinich is not nearly as far
behind as people say.
Here are some stats from the meetup website, showing the numbers of
people signed up for different meet-up groups.
Top Topics in Politics & Activism
- Dean
in 2004 (>93,200 members)
- Kucinich
in 2004 (>10,200)
- Clark
in 2004 (>10,000)
- Kerry
in 2004 (>9,700)
- Democratic
Party (>3,500)
- Million
Moms (>1,500)
- Republican
Party (>1,300)
- Edwards
in 2004 (>1,200)
- Gore
in 2004 (>1,000)
- Bush
in 2004 (>1,000)
- Anarchy
(>900)
- Gay
Rights (>800)
- Animal
Welfare (>800)
- Peace
(>700)
- Green
Party (>700)
These stats show Kucinich ahead of all the candidates except Dean, who
was the one who popularized the meet-up site in the first place. Again,
this is not a poll of 500 people, but actual stats representing over
100,000 people.
There is also this talk, patially spewed out of the DLC, that we
don't want another McGovern disaster. This is another time, a totally
different world and there's no reason to assume that one has anything to
do with the other, except, that the faux Democrats of the center (which
used to be the moderate republican position until the far right kidnappe
the republican party and dragged it into the far right) will use anything
they can to scare voters away from real democrats.
Most of the people who like Kucinich who write him off as not having a
chance say things like he's too far left or he's a total unknown. I don't
think either of these are true. He's a lefty alright. But his policies are
right on the money when it comes to labor and unions. And his
attitude toward NAFTA and the World Trade Organization (WTO) ought
to warm the hearts of workers and corporations that have been killed by
the abolishment of all protections from cheapest labor. I will have a hard
time voting for a candidate who supports the WTO.
Ralph Nader could bring the Green to the Kucinich table, and has as
much as said so. Those extra percentages could swing some states and win
the election right there.
Kucinich is a Catholic. He used to oppose abortion. I trust him when he
says he's seen the light on this issue. But my guess is his religion might
just pull some people away from Bush-- the good Catholics who can no
longer stand the smell of Bush and his gang of lying, greedy, corrupt,
pigs-- pigs who disrespect people, science, veterans, education and the
environment.
Kucinich's health care plan will cover everyone AND save money. He does
it by kicking out all the corporations that are grabbing a ttoo big of a
percentage of the cost of health care. Kucinich is getting ready to put
forward a voting law that will clean up the vote. He's the only politician
who's talking about the outrageous, insanity happening at the pentagon,
where they have failed-- I call it refused-- to account for over a
TRILLION DOLLARS in funds.
One colleague says Kucinich doesn't have the leadership skills. Well,
he's been the mayor of Cleveland and that's more and better experience
than the senators have. And the city of Cleveland, with 500,000
population, is comparable in size to the populationof Vermont, where Dean
was Governor. I know Cleveland went bankrupt when Kucinich was mayor. That
happened because he stood up to corporations that were trying to privatize
the local power company. One of those corporations that was privatized was
at the center of the most recent, and worst Power Blackout in history.
Kucinich took a tough stand and the banks and corporations screwed him.
But he did the right thing.
Kucinich did the right thing on the war too. He opposed it. You can
trust Kucinich to stand up to Megacorporations and that's what America
needs. Taking back America is not about taking it back from Bush. Bush is
a punk little shit the megacorporations-- oil, defense contractors,
automotive, energy-all manipulate and hide behind. I'm glad he posed for
those pics with the flight suit. They will, over time, become part of the
massive Bush-the-idiot joke library. But I digress. Taking back
America is all about taking it back from mega-corporations and the super
rich and giving it back to the people, to small, local businesses.
Kucinich is not a tall man. But when he speaks he roars like a lion,
expressing passion and courage, wisdom and intelligence that our country
sorely needs.
I'll vote for whichever Democrat wins the primary. But please, even if
you're already supporting one candidate, if you're a progressive, take a
long, serious look at Kucinich. In your heart, you'll find he's got the
best fit. And America needs a man who has the courage, the brains and the
vision to lead us. That's what the Republicans say the Democrats don't
have. But we do. Kucinich is the right man for the job. And hopefully,
he'll find a southern woman as his VP running mate.
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