So,
after 16 years in the House and a lifetime in Cleveland
politics, Dennis Kucinich is being sent packing, the victim
of a shrinking Ohio population and the loss of two Congressional
seats in the state. To be sure, he was never beloved beyond
the city limits of “the mistake on the lake.” Within the
city limits he was something of a beloved bad boy who said
the things that everyone else was thinking but was too timid
to say out loud. I like Dennis.
My association
with Kucinich goes back to the seventies, when I worked
at radio state WERE in Cleveland, an all-news outlet in
a city where someone on the City Council was always under
indictment, where the Mafia waged war against itself with
bombs, where race relations were worse than in the Deep
South, where Mayor Ralph Perk set fire to his head using
an acetylene torch to cut a steel ribbon at a new coke oven,
where the Cuyahoga River caught fire because it was polluted,
and where a short, pixy-looking kid with a lot of energy
looked at life from the bottom up.
Dennis was the
oldest of seven children. His father drove a truck. His
family moved 21 times. He knows what the phrase “working
class” means. He knows what it’s like to have the weight
of an entire society pressing down on you and the ones you
love. He pushed back. He was elected to the Cleveland City
Council when he was twenty-three and picked up the name
Dennis the Menace. His elders on the Council and in the
city’s political system tried to bring him around to the
way things worked, but he told them to get lost and became
a kind of folk hero in certain neighborhoods.
He was elected
Clerk of the Court, a position that had never before offered
anyone a public platform, but he used it to slam his critics
and jam home his message that the working people of Cleveland
were being screwed by the big money, big politics folks
who ran things.
He was elected
Mayor at the age of thirty-one, becoming the youngest big-city
mayor in the United States. He left no detail untended.
I was anchoring the early morning news on WERE at the time
and he never missed an opportunity call me, on the air,
to tell me that I was wrong about something I had said about
him. Snow removal is a big deal in Cleveland where lake
effect snows cover the ground most of the winter. Woe unto
me if I ran a story suggesting that some neighborhoods were
not being plowed. The problem wasn’t getting Kucinich to
talk about it. The problem was getting him to shut up.
He eventually
moved on to Congress and found his place. At times he was
the only member of the House who had the courage to say
that America’s working people are still being screwed, that
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are an outrage, that the
Pentagon’s spending is crippling the country, that the bankers
are a bunch of thieves, that unions are good, that the political
system is corrupt, that socialized medicine is a good idea,
that the country belongs to the people and not the special
interests, and that the word Progressive is positive.
Two Kucinich stories:
Shortly after he was elected Clerk of the Court he hired
one of his uncles, not an unusual event in big city government.
The man, according to the stories going around at the time,
had never really held a steady job. You may relate to this
as a family issue. Not long after the uncle was on the payroll,
he was “moving a file cabinet” and injured his back. So,
of course, he was given a lifelong city pension. Kucinich’s
critics called it an outrage. Kucinich responded by praising
his uncle for his service to the people of Cleveland and
the matter went away.
The second story
is a metaphor for his life. As mentioned earlier, he had
a few enemies. Some of these enemies were in the powerful
Mafia organization that had set up shop in Northeast Ohio.
They took out a contract on the Boy Mayor over an issue
that had them and the mayor on opposite sides, and they hired
a guy to shoot him in the head during a Columbus Day parade.
The mayor got sick and went to the hospital instead, missing
his own hit. The contract was eventually called off.
Many other less
violent contracts have been taken out on Kucinich over the
years but he dodged them all. Except the last one, the one
that left him the odd man out in a round of redistricting.
If you hold Progressive
opinions and wonder where your champions have gone, the
last one just left town.
BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator, Larry
Matthews, is a veteran broadcast journalist. He is the recipient
of The George Foster Peabody Award for Excellence in Broadcast for his reporting on Vietnam veterans. He is also
the recipient of a Columbia/DuPont Citation, Society of
Professional Journalists, Associated Press, and other awards
for investigative reporting. He is the author of I Used to Be in Radio, and two novels. Click here to reach Mr. Matthews.
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