Pubdate: Fri, 01 Aug 2003
Source: San Francisco Examiner (CA)
Contact:  2003 San Francisco Examiner
Website: http://www.examiner.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/389
Author: Adriel Hampton

KUCINICH GETS GREEN SUPPORT

Congressman Dennis Kucinich supports legalizing gay marriage, repealing the 
death penalty and the Patriot Act, withdrawing from the World Trade 
Organization and scrapping the North American Free Trade Agreement, 
implementing national ranked choice voting and publicly financed political 
campaigns, ending the occupation of Iraq, creating universal single-payer 
health care, forming a Department of Peace, cutting the Pentagon budget by 
15 percent, legalizing medical marijuana and upholding legalized abortion. 
Those positions may not land the Ohio Democrat his party's presidential 
nomination, but they have a number of third-party and independent 
progressives solidly behind his candidacy.

Thursday in San Francisco, three of California's most prominent Green Party 
members voiced support for Kucinich, though stopping short of formal 
endorsements because of the party divide.

"If Kucinich is the Democratic nominee, I am sure the Democrats and the 
Greens will work collaboratively to oust George Bush in next year's 
election," said Matt Gonzalez, president of the San Francisco Board of 
Supervisors, who introduced the candidate at a breakfast for his supporters.

Medea Benjamin, co-founder of Global Exchange and Code Pink Women for Peace 
and U.S. Senate candidate for the Greens in 2000, told The Examiner that 
Kucinich is "as green as you can get."

"He's so genuine, you wonder how this guy ever got to Congress," Benjamin said.

Peter Camejo, California's Green Party candidate for governor, said if 
Kucinich were to win the Democratic nod, he "would favor calling an 
emergency national convention of the Green Party" to discuss how to support 
the progressive candidate.

In a U.S. Green Party conference July 18-20, party leaders had affirmed 
plans to run a candidate in the presidential race.

Gonzalez urged progressive Democrats and independents voting in the March 
primary to support Kucinich.

In a press conference prior to a sold-out speech at the Commonwealth Club, 
Kucinich, who calls himself "a green Democrat," said his candidacy is 
reaching out to third parties such as the Greens, National Law Party, 
Reform Party and Libertarians.

While even core progressives doubt that Kucinich can capture his party's 
endorsement, the candidate says he presents the only alternative to 
President Bush who will fully engage the left.

"It's difficult to poll on the kind of support I have because they don't 
come out for the primary," Kucinich said. "They are going to be there when 
I am on the ballot for the United States presidency."

San Francisco Green Party activist Jim Dorenkott, who attended the 
breakfast with Kucinich, said the congressman (who in his Thursday speech 
quoted the prophet Isaiah, called for progressives to react politically, 
not with gut-level anger but from the heart with love, and drew several 
rounds of applause and standing ovations) "represents the political, 
spiritual, psychological connection that's been missing since the '60s."

Dorenkott said people who have stepped out of political activity because of 
distaste with the system are engaging with Kucinich.

"Kucinich understands the pain and anger people are feeling because of 
their difficult life situations but challenges us to rise to a level of 
hope and expectation so people will be empowered," Dorenkott said.

Gonzalez is critical of progressives lining up with former Vermont Governor 
Howard Dean, who has positioned himself as more liberal than leading 
Democratic rivals but stops short of endorsing many key progressive causes.

"Dean is not really progressive," Gonzalez said.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom