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Kucinich's Challenge
If Presidential politics actually worked like it does in the movies-or in the imaginings of patriots-the hot August night would have been one of those epic moments when everything starts to change.
Fifteen thousand trade unionists had packed into Chicago's Soldier Field to hear contenders for the 2008 Democratic nomination make their cases. While the frontrunners drew their requisite rounds of applause, it was the scrappy working class Congressman from Cleveland who wowed the AFL-CIO activists. Dennis Kucinich delivered applause line after applause line-connecting with the crowd on ideological, political, and emotional levels that the other candidates could not begin to reach.
"I want to see America take a new direction in trade . . . and that means it's time to get out of NAFTA and the WTO," shouted the Congressman above the thunderous applause that greeted his promise of "trade that's based on workers' rights: the right to organize, the right to collective bargaining, the right to strike."
So powerful was Kucinich's presentation that even the moderator, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann, shifted his line of questioning from the usual soft media inquiries about "reforming trade policies" toward a blunt demand that the candidates say whether they would "scrap NAFTA or fix it?" After Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, John Edwards, and the others struggled to answer the question without offending either the labor crowd or their corporate donors, Kucinich won the moment by declaring, "No one else on this stage could give a direct answer because they don't intend to scrap NAFTA. We're going to be stuck with it. And I'm your candidate if you want to get out of NAFTA. Let's hear it. Do you want out of NAFTA? Do you want out of the WTO?"
The steel, auto, machine, and construction workers were on their feet, cheering wildly. Again and again, on industrial policy, on health care, on each issue that arose, Kucinich owned the argument. And when the Congressman turned to the signature issue of his insurgent Presidential bid, ending the war in Iraq, he distinguished himself from the cautious contenders to his right by speaking the truth that has been on the mind of everyone who has watched the sorry degeneration of this nation's system of checks and balances. Instead of promising to end the war as President, Kucinich declared, "We shouldn't have to wait for a Democratic President to do it. The Democratic Congress needs to act now."
It was a virtuoso performance. Mark Lash, a steelworker from Crown Point, Indiana, summed it all up when he said that of the seven candidates who were trying so hard to woo the workers, it was Kucinich who gave "the answers everyone wants to hear." In one of those old Jimmy Stewart movies or maybe in a new John Cusack movie, something big would happen. Unions would have started going against expectations to endorse the underdog. The media would have started taking him seriously. A long-overdue political awakening would have begun-for the Democratic Party and for the nation.
But contemporary politics does not follow a movie script. The process unfolds along lines defined by money, polling, punditry, and the extreme caution of institutions-and even voting blocs-that are more inclined to deny possibility than to embrace it. The discarded-civics-book character of the process by which Presidents are selected is evident at every turn on the campaign trail that Kucinich follows, and it raises a fundamental question about the candidate and his hearty supporters. Will the Congressman be the Harold Stassen of the left, a smart and honorable perennial Presidential candidate yielding diminishing returns on Election Day after miserable Election Day? Or will he grab hold of the system that denies him and force something meaningful from it? Will Kucinich end his 2008 quest as an asterisk or as an irrepressible force agitating effectively against a dismaying Democratic Party and a dysfunctional democracy?
One thing is certain: Kucinich cannot expect anything more than cheers from many of those whose causes he has long and loudly championed.
Within weeks of that August AFL-CIO forum, unions began to make their endorsements.
The Machinists went for Clinton, arguably the steadiest proponent in the field of the job-killing "free trade" schemes that have decimated the union's membership.
The Carpenters and the Steelworkers broke for Edwards, a newly minted populist who sounds good but still struggles to get the specifics right.
The Firefighters backed Connecticut Senator Chris Dodd, an old-school liberal with a weaker record than Kucinich and no better prospects.
And what was the Congressman from Cleveland left with when the applause died down?
Nothing.
No endorsements from labor.
No backing from prominent Democrats.
No poll numbers of consequence nationally or in the essential early primary and caucus states.
There is something that is surely heartbreaking about the hand that is regularly dealt to Kucinich and his idealistic second bid for the Presidency. But the Congressman has chosen to play at the table of contemporary American politics, where not only the rules but the very premises of the process are stacked against him.
It is not merely the dominance of the monied elites and the party bosses, nor even the emphasis on image and style, that undermines a candidate who is actually referred to by supposedly serious reporters as "too short to be President." It is the desperation of Democratic voters denied, voters who, after so many stolen elections and failed campaigns, have convinced themselves that the only thing that matters in 2008 is winning-and that the only way to win is by nominating not the candidate who is right on the issues but the candidate who seems, a la John Kerry in 2004, to have the right strategy or at least the right stature.
Yet, Kucinich keeps returning to the table and demanding to be part of the game. Almost alone, he argues that voters might yet embrace his "new vision for America" and that he can win not just the nomination but the Presidency. In Maine, or North Dakota, or Hawaii, he never fails to claim that local support is up from what he got when he bid for the nomination in 2004 and to suggest that: "If we can do well here, [the momentum] can spread to other states and parts of the country."
Kucinich's optimism is defined by nothing so much as the Congressman's belief in magic-political magic. He clings to a faith that 2008 will provide an opening like the one that forty years earlier allowed an obscure Senator from Minnesota, Eugene McCarthy, to put questions of war and peace on the table and chase a sitting President from office, or like the one that actually made an unknown former governor of Georgia with a tendency to spout off about human rights the commander in chief.
To a degree, Kucinich's limitless faith is understandable. He has achieved alchemy more than once. Elected on the basis of sheer hard work to the Cleveland City Council as a twenty-three-year-old "new politics" candidate in 1969, he was the city's "boy mayor" by age thirty-one. But after tangling with the city's bankers and utilities, he was a defeated political has-been at thirty-three. Ridiculed in Ohio and nationally, he lost comeback bid after comeback bid before finally disappearing into political Siberia and a quest for meaning that found him living, without income or prospects, in New Mexico.
Then, in 1994, a year when Democrats were losing everywhere, Kucinich returned to Cleveland, picked up the populist banner, and won a state senate seat from a Republican incumbent.
Two years later, he defeated a key lieutenant to House Speaker Newt Gingrich to claim a seat in Congress.
Redeemed finally after decades in the political wilderness, Kucinich could have settled into a comfortable tenure on the left flank of the House Democratic Caucus. Instead, he kept right on pushing the limits of politics, fighting Presidents Clinton and Bush on issues ranging from trade to militarism and finally emerging in 2002 as the most ardent Congressional critic of the rush to war with Iraq.
Kucinich's "reward" for getting the war right was marginalization in the 2004 Presidential race, when the media portrayed a cautious war critic, former Vermont Governor Howard Dean, as the peace candidate while dismissing the campaign of the genuinely anti-war contender.
The 2004 race yielded Kucinich no primary or caucus wins and just 1 percent of the delegates at the Democratic National Convention. Yet, the Congressman is running once more, mounting essentially the same campaign that he did four years ago. Kucinich is again bouncing around the country, creating the facade of a national campaign but never sticking around long enough to convert the enthusiasm of the crowds he draws into votes. And, as in the later stages of the 2004 race, when he stubbornly refused to acknowledge that he could not win a fight that everyone knew was finished, he refuses to entertain the notion that he might not be swearing an oath of office on January 20, 2009.
There is much to be said for the power of positive thinking, but in Presidential politics the practice can be futile-especially when more prominent and monied candidates are stealing your themes: economic populist (Edwards), anti-war (New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson), and time-for-a-transformation (Obama). In Kucinich's case, his optimism borders on off-putting and out of touch. Indeed, if he continues on his current course, he runs the risk of falling short of the 643,067 (3.9 percent of the total) votes he scraped together by the end of his never-say-die 2004 run.
If that happens, it will be a political tragedy, because Dennis Kucinich is more right on the issues than ever: with his demand that Congress defund the war in Iraq, with his warnings about the dangerous machinations of the Bush-Cheney machine regarding Iran, with his courageous stance on nuclear disarmament, and with his increasingly ardent advocacy of impeachment.
Kucinich may be more necessary to the process of choosing a 2008 Democratic President than even he may understand. The front-loaded race for the nomination will be a blur for most Democrats, who will likely be told who the party's candidate is going to be long before they actually have a chance to weigh in. At that point, the trailing candidates will be told by the money men who define American politics that it is time to start suspending campaigns.
More than two dozen states will select delegates after February 5. Many of them-Wisconsin, Washington, Maine, Massachusetts, Vermont, and Oregon-have Democratic voter bases that are ardently anti-war. If Kucinich were to commit now to mount a campaign that made no pretense of personal electability but rather promised to force the party to debate its direction-not just on the war but on the whole question of what a post-Bush America might look like-he could yet turn himself into the most effective protest candidate this country has seen in years.
What might the Congressman propose to the voters of later primary and caucus states, where the choice could well come down to Kucinich versus Clinton? By telling voters "this is your chance to vote for a peace plank," Kucinich could-and should-promise to use whatever bloc of delegates he is given to fight for a clearly anti-war platform, to provoke floor fights over foreign policy and the domestic agenda, and to have his name placed in nomination in order to take his message to prime time.
In a one-on-one race, where the Kucinich campaign is about an idea rather than a man, he could turn the tables on the elites. By ditching talk about actually being nominated-which only strains his own credibility-and instead making himself the tribune of the peace and justice movement that is alive and powerful at the grassroots of the Democratic party, Dennis Kucinich could win hundreds of delegates to the 2008 convention. He could renew and redefine the debate in the later primaries and at the convention. He could force the eventual Democratic nominee to listen to the party's neglected base-which polling suggests is now very close in its thinking to the self-identified independent voters who decide close contests in November-rather than to the Wall Street donors and Washington think tanks that invariably muddle the message once the pundits declare the nomination fight to have been settled. And, maybe, just maybe, Dennis Kucinich could make the Democratic nominee more appealing than a broken political process is supposed to allow.
The challenge for Kucinich is a real one. He can run according to the rules and be a Democratic Harold Stassen, or he can break the rules and make his campaign a redemptive force. To do the former, he need merely continue campaigning as he now is. To do the latter, he must level with himself and with the voters and offer himself up as a representative of the idealistic insurgency that both the party and the country so sorely need.
Dennis Kucinich: "No Impunity"
"When you consider that this war was based on lies, when you consider that Iraq did not attack the United States, that Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11, and that Iraq did not have weapons of mass destruction, it is an urgent matter of national morality to determine what the appropriate response is.
"It is time for us to start talking about the legal responsibility of President Bush, Vice President Cheney, and all the other war architects who built a case for the war based on lies.
"The very essence of America's credibility in the world is at stake. Our highest elected officials should be held accountable for actions that resulted in the deaths of more than a million innocent people, particularly when those deaths were based on demonstrable lies.
"It is very important that we start to ask serious questions about accountability. Just as no individual has the right to take another individual's life, no nation has the right to kill innocent people in another nation. No leader of the United States-in the name of the United States-should be permitted to wage aggressive war with impunity.
"I am preparing a resolution that requests the House meet in the Committee of the Whole to investigate the matter of civilian casualties as well as U.S. troop casualties that have occurred in Iraq. The resolution will recount that the war was based on lies. It will ask the House to consider action, including possibly preferring criminal charges against individuals who in the administrative conduct of office were directly responsible for the war and the consequent loss of life.
"A grave injustice has been done to the people of Iraq and the people of the United States. More than one million lives have been lost. Families have been destroyed. Social networks have been ripped apart. We have had many soldiers killed and injured. This must be acknowledged.
"On a deeper level, the inquiry I am proposing relates to who we are as Americans and what we stand for. I refuse to believe that the American people-people of intelligence and good heart-will not want to see justice done. There must be a measure of justice brought forward so that this deep stain on American history is removed. We must seek the truth, wherever it leads." -September 19, 2007
* * *
John Nichols' new book is The Genius of Impeachment: The Founders' Cure for Royalism. Rolling Stone's Tim Dickinson hails it as a "nervy, acerbic, passionately argued history-cum-polemic [that] combines a rich examination of the parliamentary roots and past use of the 'heroic medicine' that is impeachment with a call for Democratic leaders to 'reclaim and reuse the most vital tool handed to us by the founders for the defense of our most basic liberties.'"
©2007 The Progressive Magazine
Comments
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75 Comments so far
Show AllWhen Kucinich doesn't win the nomination, for all the reasons stated many times in this thread, I wonder what Nader2000's encouraging words will be to stick with the Dems thru thick and thin. If DK should pull a rabbit out of the corrupt Dem Party hat and somehow seize the nomination (O perfect world!)then I'll gladly and happily eat my words and COMarc's as well. But for anyone still convinced Nader caused Bush to take office, by theft no less, there is probably nothing imaginable that might make them abandon the Party. For someone who says it's "demagoguery" to insist we start putting time and energy into forming a viable 3rd party, with all the failures and capitulations of the Dems staring us in the face every damn day, their utter cowardice to either impeach or get us the hell out of Iraq being but one example, little wonder he hates Nader and any hint of deviating from the current one-party system. I'm all for DK and will vote for him in the primary, but I'll be fully aware of its being little more than a protest vote, just like when I voted for Nader in 2000. I'll write Kucinich in, in the general election, for the same reason. No way I'll vote for HRC, unless I become a good Republican, since that's her real party anyway. How to finesse unending absurdity: that's the real challenge we pwogwessives face in the coming year.
Help! I'm dizzy from all this round and round arguing. We're doomed folks! We can't agree on one damned thing and we insist on EVERYTHING! I give up! As long as being right is more important than making our country and our world a better place, we'll be sitting in our own excrement for the rest of our lives. STOP ALL THIS POLORIZING TALK AND START BUILDING BRIDGES, NOT WALLS. I thought we had some common dreams...guess not.
Kucinich is a very important player in the charade known as the Democratic Party. He keeps idiots like the ones we see posting daily on Democratic Underground energized and hopeful.
Of course, this is the only purpose of his campaign, to keep the base in the party. Like Kerry in 2004, he's not running to win. He knows he'll lose and at the end he'll support a pro-war corporatist Democrat like he did in 2000 or 2004. His clueless voters will follow him and vote for either Killary or Obomber.
The only way I'd take him seriously is if he resigned his corrupt party TODAY and ran as an Independent. He'd have a better chance to get somewhere anyway. The Democratic Party is rotten to the core as much as the Republicans, they have an incurable and inoperable cancer, known as greed for war cash, just like their Republican clones. There's nothing anyone can do for them.
SOLUTION: Vote Sheehan, support her campaign by sending money. The defeat of Pelosi might very well cause a domino effect, destroying this corrupt, phony party.
"When Kucinich doesn't win the nomination, for all the reasons stated many times in this thread, I wonder what Nader2000's encouraging words will be to stick with the Dems thru thick and thin."
"Kucinich is a very important player in the charade known as the Democratic Party....the only purpose of his campaign, to keep the base in the party....at the end he'll support a pro-war corporatist Democrat like he did in 2000 or 2004."
Hey guys, words of REALISM. Here's how it works:
You put your guy forward, you support him, you do your best to win the Party nomination. Maybe you win, maybe you lose. If you lose, the guy who wins is still closer to you than the guy from the other party, and you want to be taken seriously as a player and have influence in the party, so yeah, you support the nominee of your party.
Don't like that? Okay, please explain HOW YOU ARE GOING TO WIN THE GENERAL ELECTION IF YOU CAN'T EVEN MUSTER ENOUGH VOTES TO WIN THE NOMINATION OF YOUR PARTY.
Why is there room for only two parties? Because there is only one winner. And there are lots of interest groups. What they do is form coalitions to gain access to power. Most issues have two sides. Each side joins one coalition.
Either you play the game, or you lose. There are lots of ways to lose, and lots of ways to opt out of the game. But there is only one game, and there are only going to be two parties.
No, the Democratic Party is not progressive, but of the two parties it is the one that stands to the left. Progressives can access power through the Democratic Party. No other way.
I'm not saying this is how it should be. I'm saying this is how it is. We want to change America, change policies. Trying to change the number of parties is irrelevant and futile.
Here some real thinking is going on. Bravo to Earthian's Kucinich Plan. This is great stuff. Not that it's the answer, but it's an authentic and promising effort. This campaign - the progressive campaign - has to bust out of the box if anything new is going to happen AND IT COULD!!! Does it make less sense than the status quo or alternatives? What alternatives? Are there any? This is it, folks. Kucinich is the alternative, so what are he and we gonna do about it? Let's begin by rejoicing that there IS an alternative, then let's get busy. There are some smart people in our midst, so let's not be stopped.
The problem isn't that there are only two parties, it's that neither of them represents an alternative to plutocracy. If we sincerely want democracy, then busting the monopoly is an essential start. If reality doesn't undergo a transformation here, we can't expect to see the change we're seeking. As Gandhi said, we have to become that change. So,don't believe what the MSM tells you about Kucinich's electability - they have their own vested interest in status quo. And what's at stake here is much bigger than one brave individual's candidacy. Work for his election and work with him to make sure progressive aspirations don't die with a failed run for the Democratic nomination. We cannot be saved by one human being, however wise, principled and heroic.
Practically everyone, no matter who they are, wants change constantly in life. It is a matter of what change and to what degree, but the point is; change is always on the table.
If we accept that change is part of the basic equation, then why rally behind change that won't change anything? That is foolish.
The solution is not embracing a two party system that provides little change.
The solution to the election process is to provide equal funding to multiple candidates, discontinue private funding, have multiple parties/candidates, have paper ballots, have a popular vote, and have a runoff in the end.
It is very simple, and it is the only way any election could be considered free and democratic. If you want to 'change' things, hammer your representatives over and over for that!
Unless and until there are 'free' elections, any change will be minimal or miracle.
GORE: 1)clotted blood, 2)a tapering or triangular piece 3)to cut into triangular form 4)to pierce or wound with a horn or tusk.
Al Gore - clotted, finished (as a candidate for office), triangulating (as a Clinton in office), cut in triangular form,(always changing to espouse views he believes he needs to talk about to gain support yet never actually acting on those supposed beliefs) wounded by an elephant tusk in 2000.
Gore - not a bad fella overall, good job bringing global warming home to those who recently woke up from a twenty year nap - not remotely a progressive - not worthy of being on the same ticket as Kucinich - NOT A CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT NOW AND NEVER SHOULD BE AGAIN.
Some of you folks are just plain crazy.
KUCINICH: Great guy, Great ideas, - not enough $$$$$ to be invited to the auction.
HILLARY: The next president of the empire - I'm sad
DEMOCRATS: A lost and confused peoples, relegated to wander aimlessly in the deserts of corporate money, world banking, oil interests, AIPAC and war. - waiting for Moses to show up with the 10 commitments (more likely to just be committed)
I must echo dolkar by saying we must become Venezuelan, Bolivian, Ecuadoran, etc.--actors on steroids in participatory democracy--and thereby motivate the majority of non-voters to vote, for that is the only way a progressive can win. And sorry to say, but the ongoing economic downturn will help our cause.
This is the best battle cry I've seen yet: dolkar: " Let's begin by rejoicing that there IS an alternative, then let's get busy. There are some smart people in our midst, so let's not be stopped." A fundamental condition for non-voters is they aren't registered to vote and provided pre-election material, such as a sample ballot and voters issues booklet.
Having said what I did about election reform, I want to also say that I second what dolkar said too.
The polls and MSM are not infallible. Kucinch CAN win, both the nomination and the election. He can. And I think, if Dennis becomes president, he may be the one to actually bring election reform about.
Anything is possible and we must all fight the good fight for the sake of future generations, if not for anything else, but there are a million reasons. Choosing between the lesser of two evils is not fighting the good fight.
What was that line?... "Give me liberty or give me death". That is called commitment and that is called the good fight. That is pulling out all the stops. That is called passion!
Frankly, I don't think that any of the other candidates can beat a republican. That is the tricky little horror that most people are overlooking. I think Dennis is the ONLY candidate who actually CAN win. If it were between Kucinich and any of the repubs, Dennis would win. The other Demo candidates, I doubt it.
And besides, the other candidates are just bushlite anyway.
Time to turn up the passion.
Kucinich should quit the Democratic party. It stands for nothing, and it's corrupt to the core. Kucinich should get on the ballot as an independent. Nichols also should desert the party. Sticking with this discredited organization amounts to the abandonment of principle.
Kucinich will never raise enough money to be invited to the political table. In the end, it's money that talks and money that wins, and if you don't have that, you have nothing, even if you speak the right message. Money rules everything anymore, sadly, and it's what has permanently corrupted our political system and has removed the people's voice from their elected officials, who only speak with the voices of their biggest donors, those usually being the super wealthy.
Those of us ordinary people have lost our voice in a wash of Big Money and I think things have gone so far as to never again be able to gain back our say in things. I think things have gotten too far gone to be able to fix them. God bless Dennis Kucinich - I absolutely agree with everything he's saying and I've campaigned for him and talked him up to a lot of people, but.....the only names on people's lips these days are Obama and Hillary. They're the ones raising the big bucks and who have the handlers and alliances to get them where they are, that being the two front running mainstream candidates. And even Obama is seriously lagging behind Hillary in the poll numbers.
People seem to want the Clintons back in the White House because they remember how good times seemed when they were there in the 90's, but what most people don't realise is that much of that wealth that people were making back then was all smoke and mirrors and it came crashing down in the big dot.com bust in 2000. So things may have seemed good on paper, but when it all came down to it, it was a sham, an illusion, cleverly created by some speculators who saw the Internet as the Next Big Thing but who failed to create real brick and mortar companies that had something to show for themselves.
I see a big repeat of the 1920's and 30's going on right now. The 90's were much like the 20's - massive speculation, soaring stock prices, credit out the wazoo, sham wealth, and then the bottom fell out in 1929, just like we're seeing now with the sinking real estate market from the subprime meltdown, massive manufacturing layoffs like the ones announced yesterday by Chrysler, occasionally scary stock market mini-crashes like yesterday when the Dow Jones Industrial slid some 360 points....signs are pointing strongly to a repeat of the 1930's, maybe not as severe because we have safeguards in place now, but.....I see a big economic downturn coming and we'd all better be prepared for it.
And frankly......Kucinich has been right all along about so many of these things, but no one will give him a serious listen. He's a Voice in the Wilderness. And that's sad, because he's been right time after time on so many issues. I'll continue to support him and I hope that he bolts the Democratic Party for the Greens. He'd be much better suited there, frankly, and might even get a fair hearing from the rest of the country if he did that.
Last year my heart and head told me to vote for Kucinich. But I yielded to the big player, John Kerry. I won't let that happen again. I will be proud to cast my vote for Kucinich. He makes sense. He speaks plainly. And you get the sense that he really cares about this country and its future.
I too will change my designation as unspecified to democrat to cast a vote for Kucinich in the Iowa caucus. I will constantly bring up his name. I will endorse his proposed policies and ideas as I did in 2004.
Then I will watch as the MSM dismisses him, the DNC ignores him, progressives turn their backs on him to race to the "electable" alternatives, and I will once again go back to my own work to bring down the two party system, destroy the concept of corporate personhood that allows this to happen, advocate against Industrial "Agri-Terrorism" (my own term for what passes in my home state as "Agriculture") and work to build stronger communities to bring people together in solidarity for issues that affect us all.
May the government of the U.S. fall precipitously and may the people rise up out of the ashes of empire and build a true community that respects life, justice, and the rights of all creatures to enjoy a healthy, sustainable future.
Paul Bramscher and COMarc,
I have to respectfully disagree with your conclusions. I think we all agree that the Democrats as well as the Republicans are corporatists, but I disagree strongly with those who argue or imply that somehow the Democrats and Republicans work together as part of the same team.
I see the two parties as similar to two rival Mafia gangs. They are both criminal, and self-serving, and engage in similar activities, but that does not mean they work together. On the contrary, they are battling for the same turf and are blood enemies. As the Democrats have become more corporatist, the two parties have become more redundant, and one has to go.
I strongly prefer the one to go to be the Republicans. They are bigger risk-takers, willing to risk world-wide nuclear war and human extinction in their drive to subjugate the peoples of the so-called third world. They are more brazen and bold in their attempts to polarize society as they do not fear revolution and are not concerned with social unrest. They will seize total power through fraudulent elections if possible, as with the exception of the pabulum they serve to the truly dimwitted, they make no pretense at believing in democracy or the constitution. If given the opportunity, they surely will further limit the Bill of Rights and remove any ability of the Internet to serve as a forum for political discussions or organizing.
And many articles have recently appeared signaling a possible divorce with the Religious Right is in the works. And the Republicans have never seemed so incompetent and ignorant, including the anti-science nonsense. So, if there is going to be just one corporate party going forward after 2008, why can't we help the corporate elites choose the Democratic Party as the one to survive to serve their interests, enabling us to build one to the left of it?
Comparing the Rethugs and the Dems to competing Mafia families seems fairly illuminating. I agree, that's a good way of describing our vaunted and loathed political parties. So they're both criminal and self-serving, interested only in money and power, the extension and making permanent of US hegemony throughout the world. And while the Dems may still take advantage of a remnant of populist rhetoric, pretending they care about everyday people, etc., nobody believes it since it's been a transparent ruse for 30 years, and only those who've been asleep that long still fall for the sales pitch.
But somehow we're expected to forget all that and cling with purblind stubbornness to the Dems as our only "real" alternative. The thing to remember about the Mafia analogy is that while the competing families may be engaged in turf wars and have a long history of grudges, they are equally committed to insuring that La Cosa Nostra remains "their thing," that nobody else intrudes in their criminal business venture and that it stay on top of the power struggle, laughing all the way to their private resorts aboard their private jets at the shmucks who still think they're going to change their little game "from within."
It's like all the idealistic law students from the '70s and '80s who were convinced they'd change the legal profession from within. Didn't happen, the profession changed them, or they were driven out, and neither will progressives change the Democratic Party by submitting to be absorbed by it. Kucinich himself is living proof. He's not changing the party, so how the hell do we powerless bloggers think we'll do it?
Ephraim,
It is a long difficult slog for progressives to exert any power within or outside the Democratic Party. I think too many are seduced by the illusion that a new party offers some never-before-seen transformation of the political landscape, and that all the difficulties involved in changing minds in the Democratic Party will not be present with the new party.
In any case, I believe the best chance would be to start a third party after the Republicans have become irrelevant. Otherwise, a third party to the left could enable the Republicans to take total and permanent control of the government. They have come so close, and they have so many in the federal court system supporting them, particularly the Supreme Court, which has four fascists and one conservative Republican.
However, if the left completely abandons the Democrats and they become irrelevant and the Republicans take total control, only a completely naive ditto-head could believe the Republicans will ever relinquish power to a progressive party to the left without a tremendous amount of bloodshed, regardless of election outcomes. These people have shown time and again they could not care less about democracy or the constitution and they are prepared to spill a great amount of blood, American and other, to ensure total domination of the planet by the corporate oligarchy.
Though corporatists, most of the Democrats do appear to at least have a scintilla of humanity and concern for the fate of the country and the human race. The Republicans do not.
By the way, I was one of those idealistic law students and I still am an attorney.
It is not what Kucinich SAYS. Any dime a dozen political liar for hire to the highest bidder will obviously say whatever is needed to ensure maintenance of the corporate criminal regime status quo;
It is what Kucinich DOES that matters now;
1. Publicly renounce and revile the other wing of corporate crime representation for what it is.
2. Publicly renounce and revile those complicit lackies to corporate criminal interests, otherwise known as "congressional representatives" for their open and willing support and sustaining of the crimes being commited by their masters.
3. Publicly announce the formation of the new party, The Whole Earth Party (whatever), based on global unity, cooperation, disarmament, ecologically sound practice, equitable distribution, and inalienable human rights.
4. Publicly call for the immediate arrest, incarceration, trial, and certain conviction of mass murder, treason, torture, and willful deceit against the current administration as well as all those congressional representatives who willfully continue to support the crimes being commited against the innocent.
5. Publicly state that the American people will immediately commence reparations to the fullest extent to the wronged peoples of Iraq.
6. Publicly demand the immediate retraction of illegally stationed US armed forces from the sovereign nation of Iraq.
Unless DK takes steps similar at least to the above, he is either a mere bit player, a provincial American stooge to forces he cannot comprehend, or else he is an outright liar in the services of the enemy to human brotherhood in order to, as so rightly stated earlier here, keep the uncertain in the ranks.
As for any institution such as "organized" (make me laugh) labor, et al, any fool is aware that those bodies are long since controlled by servants of the criminal corporate oligarch. Their selections of whom they will support as legitimate representatives of truth, justice, and the will of the American people more than prove this.
"In Kucinich's case, his optimism borders on off-putting and out of touch."
As a black man in Amerikkka, I'm constantly inundated by whites who "think" such positive thinking is The Answer to EVERYTHING -- particularly when it comes to finding a living wage job. "Oh, you're being too negative," and so forth.
From this moment on, I NEVER want to hear another goddamn thang from some New Age liberal/hippie about how I have the power to change my reality. IF I DID, Kucinich would've been nominated in 2004 and would ALREADY be in the White House!
Either the evil D.L.C. steps aside and nominates Kucinich or I will NOT vote next year! The commies are right: There's NO difference between the donkey and the elephant -- no matter what lawyer-sounding writer from The Nation magazine claims.
Propping Hillary and Obama up on pedestals in order to CON the public into "thinking" the Democrats are left-wing JUST BECAUSE one's a woman and the other is black ... Oy Vey! Look at their platforms, people! LOOK AT THEIR PLATFORMS!
Kucinich in '08 or bust!
Saab,
"Propping Hillary and Obama up on pedestals in order to CON the public into "thinking" the Democrats are left-wing JUST BECAUSE one's a woman and the other is black … Oy Vey! Look at their platforms, people! LOOK AT THEIR PLATFORMS!"
Hell yeah. If you ain't looking at platforms and voting records, you're going by impression. May as well be reading tea leaves - scratch that, tea leaves are more effective. If all these DLC bots fucking read Clinton's platform in 1992, things may have been different.
To the DLC supporters:
Look. You don't get anywhere by compromising your rights away. If you don't start evaluating your principles very carefully, one of two things is going to happen:
1. The same ol', same ol' - which means that a republican - a neo-con republican in all likelihood - will be elected again; quite possibly not in 2008, but definitely soon. Why? Because that's the system that you seem hell-bent on protecting, even as it pulls the rug out from under you.
2. A revolution.
So enjoy your sleep while it lasts - I prefer to be awake, myself.
The author, John Nichols, need to retract a statement made in his editorial because it is not true:
"After Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, John Edwards, and the others struggled to answer the question without offending either the labor crowd or their corporate donors...."
It is extremely important to note that Obama has no corporate donors. Obama takes money only from individual donors.
Just THINK how much better off the world would be now if DK had been elected the first time he ran for President. Just THINK how much better off the world will be in the future if he would be elected THIS time. Support Dennis Kucinich any and every way that you can and PRAY like all get out that Americans wake up and vote for the BEST candidate THIS TIME around!
Don't be suprised, its an old story: When a country is
on a toboggan to lose power, wealth, international
standing, etc. it inevitably loses integrity & respect
for the basics that made-up that country
We will be lucky in Bush and The Dick don't get us into
another military bummer before they leave. But, then by
God, what can we do if they decide not to go? Scary
thought.
With great good fortune Dennis, Cindy and a few other
Dems may be endorsed by the Green Party 'cause that's
where I'm going. Have a peculiar loathing for funerals.
To Pelosi, Hoyer and their ilk: fool me once shame on
you, etc.