Dennis Kucinich's Media Fight
Ohio voters head to the polls for a primary election Tuesday, and that can mean only one thing: The Cleveland Plain Dealer is griping about Congressman Dennis Kucinich.
There is nothing new, nor anything wrong, with newspapers holding members of Congress to account.
In fact, it would be good if more did so.
But the Plain Dealer, the uber-dominant daily newspaper in the city and its suburbs since the folding a quarter century ago of the feisty Cleveland Press, is not exactly holding the congressman to account. Rather, it is looking for every opportunity to put a former mayor, with whom it has sparred for decades, in his place.
The Plain Dealer's penchant for pounding on Kucinich has little to do with the congressman's failed presidential bids or his current advocacy on behalf of changing U.S. foreign policy, restoring a measure of balance to our trade policies or impeaching members of the Bush-Cheney administration for high crimes and misdemeanors.
While there is no question that Kucinich has put himself at odds with party leaders and pundits in Washington and Ohio - some of whom disagree with him ideologically and many of whom think his Democratic presidential campaigns of 2004 and 2008 gave new meaning to the word "quixotic" -- Kucinich is hardly the only Cleveland-area House member who stretches the boundaries of the political etiquette. (Stephanie Tubbs Jones, who represents a neighboring district, mounted an necessary but controversial challenge to Congressional approval of the results of the 2004 presidential election because of unresolved issues with the vote count in her state.)
Nor is the newspaper's gripe a personal one rooted in bad blood between individuals on the staff and a particularly-independent local official. While a few old timers remain from the days when Kucinich and the paper clashed on an almost daily basis, the penchant of the paper's writers to pound on Kucinich knows no generational limitation.
The Plain Dealer's distaste for Kucinich is institutional. Since the 1970s, when he was the 31-year-old "boy mayor" of Cleveland, Kucinich has rubbed the city's economic elites - for whom the Plain Dealer has often served as a friendly newspaper of record - wrong. Kucinich never behaved as the Plain Dealer's editors expected a mayor to behave. He refused to bend to the demands of the downtown bankers and the corporate CEOs who had gotten used to local officials - Democrats and Republicans - making populist noises but doing as they were told when it came time to choose between the boardrooms of the city's office towers and the ethnic neighborhoods of the city and its working-class suburbs.
Kucinich's refusal to permit the privatization of Cleveland's municipal power plant was a classic battle between a city's economic, political and media elites on one side and an almost unimaginably principled official on the other. The business community and its media mouthpieces tossed every charge they could at the mayor and most of them stuck. He was ultimately driven from office with a reputation so smeared that, when I arrived in Ohio as a young newspaper reporter in the 1980s, one of the first things I "learned" was that Kucinich was probably a bit unbalanced and certainly "finished forever" in politics.
Only after meeting and interviewing the former mayor did I come to the conclusion that what the Plain Dealer and many other Ohio media outlets saw as instability was a rare commodity in that state's stilted politics: a principled determination to stand against entrenched power, even at great political expense.
As a political writer and later an editor for The Toledo Blade, I became a regular reader of the Plain Dealer. I came to respect much about the newspaper, and I retain high regard for many of its writers. (Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Connie Schultz's latest column on the media's mistreatment of Hillary Clinton is smarter and deeper than anything else I've read on what is rapidly emerging as a serious issue in this campaign.)
But I was always struck by the energy Ohio's largest newspaper -- and other media outlets that followed its lead - always expended when it came to going after Kucinich.
To be sure, the congressman's brought scrutiny and criticism on himself; even when he's right, he can be more rigid and righteous than is politically smart. But, the thing is, Kucinich does have a tendency to be right - on the war in Iraq, on civil liberties, on trade policy, on health care reform and even the media-ownership issues that most unsettle the managers of chain newspapers.
Unfortunately, being proven right scores an Ohio politico few points from the state's major media outlets. In fact, the most consistently correct political players in the state - folks like Senator Sherrod Brown and Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur - have for years taken media hits for their steady criticism of trade pacts and economic policies that have turned out to be disasters for Ohio.
Kucinich's successful battle to preserve municipal power in Cleveland may have protected working families from spikes in their utility rates. The former mayor's warnings that the bankers and the CEOs would abandon Cleveland in its hours of need may have proven to be prescient. But, still, the savaging by the Plain Dealer has continued.
Even when the voters of Cleveland and neighboring communities restored the former mayor to public life in the 1990s, first as a state senator and then as their representative to Congress - in each case, choosing him over Republican incumbents in "Reagan Democrat" swing districts - there would be no forgiveness and no forgetting by the local newspaper.
Kucinich, it is said in Cleveland, could walk on the waters of Lake Erie and still the Plain Dealer headline would read "Dennis Can't Swim." Uninspired primary challengers have still enjoyed friendly coverage - and sometimes enthusiastic endorsements -- from the Plain Dealer.
This year, as Kucinich seeks reelection in a March 4 primary where he faces a reasonably well-financed challenge from a Cleveland councilman who has made a rough peace with the local elites - as well as several less fiscally-endowed contenders -- the Plain Dealer is campaigning as hard to defeat the congressman as are his foes.
The newspaper has not merely endorsed Kucinich's most prominent opponent, a one-time fan of the congressman named Joe Cimperman, it has taken every opportunity to portray Kucinich - whose passion for all things Cleveland, from polka music to kielbasa to steel factories is legendary -- as a flaky foreigner who neither understands nor cares about the city and its suburbs. The paper spills almost as much ink recounting actor Sean Penn's support of Kucinich than it does on the Hollywood lefty's movies.
Never mind that challenger Cimperman does not live in Kucinich's 10th District - the councilman is a resident of Congresswoman Jones' neighboring district but is Constitutionally permitted to run where he chooses - Kucinich is portrayed as the interloper. "Cimperman cannot vote for himself March 4," the Plain Dealer admitted in a February 21 editorial that may go down in history as one of the more bizarre arguments ever made by a newspaper on behalf of its endorsed candidate. "But people in the 10th District who want real leadership can vote - for Joe Cimperman."
What is "real leadership" in the eyes of the editors of the Plain Dealer? In Cimperman's case, it is best defined as a willingness to work with the community's business elites. Yes, the councilman objected at first to a Wal-Mart being located in a neighborhood where it was expected to threaten locally-owned shops. But when the chain store prevailed, chirps the PD, Cimperman accepted his lemons and "made lemonade." Translation: He made peace with the developers. That, the paper says, is the measure of "a smart leader."
Kucinich, on the other hand, is condemned for standing too firmly for living-wage jobs, local shopkeepers and real health-care reform. And it's not just Kucinich who is attacked. When local labor leaders stand up for the congressman who has fought with them to block bad trade deals and protect good jobs, they are accused of giving Kucinich "too much credit" for standing up for workers.
The editorials, the columns, the news analysis articles dismissing the assertions made by labor leaders in Kucinich's television ads, the constant references to Cimperman as a "workhorse" and the congressman as a "show horse" will continue through Tuesday. Then the voters of Cleveland, Lakewood, North Olmsted, Parma and neighboring communities will have their say. If they believe the Plain Dealer, they will reject Kucinich and get themselves a congressman who is skilled in the art of compromise. On the other hand, it they listen to Harriet Applegate, the executive secretary of the Cleveland-based North Shore AFL-CIO Federation of Labor, who says that Kucinich's edgy critique of corporate power - and even of corporate media -- is what's needed in Washington.
"It doesn't help to have all 435 members of the House be compromisers and negotiators," argues Applegate. Despite the Plain Dealer's preaching, the veteran union leader says, "Dennis Kucinich has worked tirelessly for working people, and that is why labor supports him." Conversely, it is Kucinich's refusal to compromise that guarantees the Cleveland Plain Dealer will continue to criticize this congressman for so long his name remains on the ballot.
John Nichols is a co-founder of Free Press and the co-author with Robert W. McChesney of TRAGEDY & FARCE: How the American Media Sell Wars, Spin Elections, and Destroy Democracy — The New Press.
© 2008 The Nation
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36 Comments so far
Show AllDennis Kucinich is the poster boy for what a representative of the people should be. The power brokers do not like that image because it shows them to be what they are, greedy, abusive of power and uncaring about the lot of the average man.
The Clintons are shown up by this kind of man and leader. The Republican would like to jail him. Too bad the entire congress is not made of people of this ilk. this is what America lacks and may never find.
Thank god for Kucinich. We've got at least one politician who works for us. And shame on that rag of a newspaper whose only agenda is to perpetuate those lies that corporate america wants us to believe.
Unionguy, thanks for all your hard work for Dennis' campaign. Is there any danger to his seat from the Republican challenger, Trabak (sp?)? My understanding is that the 10th is a solidly Democratic seat, but the way things are going these days, one never knows. Your intel on this would be welcome.
star...---Thanks! But please do something else, don't just "bless." Please, please---get involved in the fight. Encourage others, also. While I enjoy pecking on these blogs, I get so frustrated at the number of folks on here, for example, that say they "love" Dennis, but don't really listen to him, follow him or help him. We need to work together to get folks off their seats and into the streets. When they are fighting alongside folks, that is actually where they can be listened to.
Again,. thank you very much!
After working for the past couple months, I was so damned tired last nite that I couldn't get over to his party.
Dennis won! YES!
Unionguy--bless you and all your union brothers and sisters.
DK is allot of people's hero. Wish he were a typical Congressperson instead of an exceptional one. We are rooting for him.
Dennis is the type of person so far above the ordinary that most dont realize someone of his fortitude, integrity, and wisdom even exists.
First of all, some of the comments (above) are really annoying! I have been working my ass off, with union folks in Cleveland to reelect Dennis. He is a stand-up hero to working people of this district, and no, we aren't going to let him be "swift-boated." It is the organized labor movment that is Dennis' base, doing 95% of his shock troops. The "Democratic leaders" are NOT who is attacking Dennis. In fact, the entire Democratic Party machine has endorsed Dennis. Those behind the attacks on Dennis are primarially the N Ohio business community, combined with big contributions from AIPAC/Zionist forces.
Much of the problem is that the Democratic Party leadership, much like 99% of the folks on this blog, as well as the so-called 'peace movment,' praise Dennis, endorse him, but it is left to the Unions to do all the actually fighting, all the work.
I want to point out to all of those, (above), who arrogantly call for Dennis to lose, or give up his seat, or to jump to some little sect, from the Democratic Party, DENNIS KUCINICH IS A LIFELONG DEMOCRATIC!! This is now the Primary election, and Dennis is fighting to keep that tag, because he is part of the wide national coalition against the ultra-right. The vast majority of folks in his district are Democrats, and Dennis represents them. We, and Dennis, are NOT FUCKING GIVING UP!! Not for big business, not for right-wing Zionists, and NOT for any idiots on here that has absolutely NO knowledge of our home town, our conditions, our struggles, or of our very dear friend Dennis Kucinich.
Dennis regularly says' "This is not MY seat in congress, it belongs to organized labor and I'm just holding it for you. Corporations have hundreds of seats in congress. This is one that belongs to working people!"
Those who state that they "love" Dennis should, please, listen to what he actually stands for, what he is asking you to do, don't just cherry-pick little sound bites that you like and disregard the rest. Dennis is, for now, a solid part of the wide coalition that is fighting to replace the corporate, right-wing administration running our country into the ground. He WILL BE working his butt of, like the rest of us, to defeat the GOP and elect a democratic administration, as our best hope of creating conditions that make it possible to win changes for our people. Dennis is NOT going to commit political suicide and jump to some tiny, divisive political sect, like the Greens. If Dennis joins a new political party, it will be when organized labor and the main progressive people's forces are ready to do so, together. That is not ready to take place at this time.
What gives Dennis his ability to stand up, hold forth on the issues we all feel are of great importance is his seat in congress. We are fighting like hell to keep it! I would strongly encourage those who can to donate to Dennis' campaign, or, if you're close to Cleveland, come over and help out in the fight.
What we DON'T need any more of is advice. Go to your local Union offices, offer your help. We need your help, not your advice!
Rebel Farmer sez: "As I remember, Bernie was a repug who just couldn't stomach his party's actions anymore."
As USAn notes above, that's not Bernie. You're almost certainly thinking of the other Vermont Senator, Jim Jeffords, who bolted the Fascist Party over the "No Neil Bush Left Behind" legislation in 2001.
The weather is poor in Cleveland today. Freezing rain-ice glaze and snow. This should help Kucinich.
"As I remember, Bernie was a repug who just couldn't stomach his party's actions anymore."
As a life-long socialist, Sen. Sanders was most _decidedly_ never a Republican. He started hus career in the antiwar vermont Liberty Union party, andlater formed the Vermont Progressive Party.
The democratic powers-that-be are very much putting their support behind Cimperman. Kucinich's District is perfectly safe, there was no danger of any republican beaing Kucinich, so this can only be construed as a effort of the vile democratic party to cleanse itself of it's last genuine progressives.
They succedded in this once - in Atlanta in 2004.
Kucinich is being Cynthia-McKinnied.
Any comment on this, Mr. Daniel David?
wish we had 400 congressmen and some voters with Kuccinich's integrity and wisdom. He is a good man.
Thank you, Surrender!
Keep an eye out for future developments between Dennis and fellow congressman, Ron Paul (Libertarian/Republican). Their voting records coincide nicely 60-70% of the time. Each is being shunned by his respective party. They have been discussing some form of collaboration.
They don't agree on every issue, but they do agree on the important issues of War and Imperialism, national sovereignty (ours and everyone else's), constitutional law, bi-lateral trade agreements (no NAFTA, no WTO, etc.), and of course dumping the Patriot Act.
Paul is running for President under the R label and has a good-sized following of mostly young adults.
Ya know, if the dimm's machinery actually are behind promarying DK, if he wins his reelection, can he declare himself an Independent like Bernie (?) did in Vermont? As I remember, Bernie was a repug who just couldn't stomach his party's actions anymore. The only problem with that is that DK would lose his gavel on some really important committees.
I for one hope that DK looses his bid for congressman in the Democrat Party, it is time for him to move on.
Dennis has proven time and again that he has taken adversity to come back stronger than ever and rise to greater hights of public service.
Dennis represents the views of the overwelming progressives in this country and for him to try to fight the regressive DP iswastefull,please Dennis leave the rotting Democratic party and become an indipendent or Green and you will find yourself in the middle of a movement that supports you and desperatly needs you,you are a proven commodity. As things stand you seem to be nothing more than a shill for the DP to pretend that there are true progrssives still living there.
Please abandon the DP and go on to greater hights,you deserve it and so do we the people.
I am pulling strongly for Dennis!! He is great...!!
hey, comark, did the other dems actually back his opponents? i thought they were busy dealing with their own stuff. more likely the cleveland plain dealer can't plainly deal with someone whose vision reached beyond theirs and helped the people they were trying to exploit.
Thank you, Surrender. That link brightened up my day. Dennis is a REAL hero!!! Th people in his Ohio district have a real ooprtunity to help ALL of America with his re-election. The rest of Ohio only helps choose which "zero" replaces White House Resident bush.
After the Nader 2000 campaign, the Kucinich campaigns have always been held up as an example of how progressives should try to work from within the Dem party.
So, take very close note of the Dem elite trying to kick Kucinich out of the Congress.
What they are saying is that progressives are not welcome in that party.
Don't stay where you aren't wanted. Leave the Democrat party. Don't vote Democrat. Don't donate to Democrats. Put your energy some place where progressives are welcome. Build it yourself if you need to. You know damn well that the corporations won't build it for you.
Good news, Folks:
http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/31474
You are equally known by the enemies you make as well as the friends you keep. Beig dissed by the Plain Dealer and monopoly-owned electronic media is a badge of honor. I hope the voters in DK's district send him back to Capitol Hill for another term. He is the only thing that has made this election season interesting or enjoyable to me.
I don't know what's happened here, but I seem to have submitted the same comment three times. I don't know how to remove the extra ones.
Dennis Kucinich is starting to become one of my personal heroes. Along with Ehrin Watada, Kevin Benderman, Cindy Sheehan and George Galloway.
They are obviously not going to let Dennis be president, but I hope he survives politically. He is too valuable to loses.
Dennis Kucinich is one of the very few politicians that has any intergity, and he certainly is right on most of the issues facing the U.S. electorate. And the failure of the populace to support him is a telling mark on how little the populace has in choosing politicians. The populace is so lacking in rudimentary conceptions of political candidates and policies, that they may well elect John McCain, a dangerous man who will have us continue to get us into perpetual wars. What Kucinich is to political candidates, John Nichols is to journalists. He was a great assett to the Toledo Blade, and he remains one of the few people today who is a real journalist, and a welcome voice that is lacking by the reactionaries at NBR and PBS.
Our ruling overlords don't like ANY voices representing the working class in Congress. They are trying to McKinney Kucinich.
I hope that they don't succeed. If they do, I hope he McKinneys himself over to the Green Party, where we appreciate those who stand for the common good.
John Nichols, you are a master triangulator. Your article makes a strong defense of Kucinich against the Plain Dealer, voice of concentrated power in Cleveland, then in the last paragraph suggest that the people may, perhaps, sort of, might be a wee bit better off with just a tad extra representation in the government.
That conclusion is totally out of line with what Kucinich stands for, what progressives stand for. The people deserve representation in the government proportional to their numbers, which means a WHOLE LOT more than they have now. What's th DLC paying you, Mr. Nichols? Who donates what to The Nation?
Why is this country's people so in love with lies, yet call themselves Christians, Jews, and whatever...
Dennis is SO rare!! WE must be grateful that he never gives up!
Well, Ohio is one of the most affected communities by the "free market". Like whateveryousay pointed before, if he doesn't get elected, maybe is because they don't deserve his leadership.
hey, jack37. dennis kucinich was able to see that he would not be elected president any time soon, so he raced back to ohio's tenth district to try to win this primary. go, dennis!
I still can't believe Kucinich walked out on the campaign. He had the anchors in the Constitution and in international humanity to really drive some key questions/issues before the public, and was media-assassinated, pure and simple (even you, Olbermann-MSN, whom I will not watch again). If he deeply believed all that he was saying, and his numbers had begun to appear on primary screens, he should have taken the hits, gone bankrupt in the process to embarrass the business fucks even more (this is what a guy has to go through if he's speaking like an adult to adults)....He could at least have built some accountability to reality into what we've been getting and will get: the corporate infomercial pseudo-vote....And this claptrap mazurka is what we aim to give other countries to "help them make progress"....
From my vantage point up here, Dennis Kucinich seems a very rare and inspiring exception to what I can only call the corporate cesspool of American politics. I hope the voters of Ohio's Tenth District don't allow the corporately inspired smears against Dennis to stick.
May Dennis survive and live to fight again, as he always has, in speaking truth to power.
I'm praying that the people of the 10th District have enough wisdom to see through the Plain Dealer's ridiculous and obvious bias against Kucinich and to appreciate how fortunate they are to have him as their Congressman. I WISH he were my Congressman. His opponent Cimperman is vile, and if the people of the 10th District vote Cimperman in, they will realize very quickly what a horrible mistake they made in doing so. Let's hope that doesn't happen.
Sometimes one wonders if people even deserve to have great leaders like Kucinich. Sure, papers are influential, but they shouldn't be blinding. If Dennis isn't re-elected, it's the people's loss, and it would be their own (and in that event - stupid) fault.
On the other hand...these media folks should be hung up to dry.
I hope Dennis continues and expands his fight to bring together the working class who must, as a class, first recognise, and then rise against its corporate masters and lawfully change the government to one which serves the needs of its people.
www.PFANS.org