It didn’t look good for Dennis Kucinich, and Larry Flynt knew as much in February. Speaking to Shira Toeplitz of Roll Call, Flynt (yes, that one) said this about the longtime Democratic congressman’s chances to stay in Congress — but in a brand-new district:
“I’ve supported him ever since he was mayor of Cleveland … I hope he does [win], but you have to call them as you see them, and it doesn’t look too good for him.”
Kucinich’s calamitous two-year term as the “boy mayor” of my native Cleveland put the city into default in the late seventies, but he rebounded to win election to Congress in 1996, then easily re-elected six times, and as a staunch liberal. So why was he in trouble in this Democratic primary? Because Kucinich was representing the 10th congressional district, and this primary was for the brand-new 9th district. And there was the rub.
Larry Flynt was correct. Kucinich conceded his first loss in 16 years last night, but woke up still spitting hot fire. But rather than directing that fire against the Republicans who were the reason he was having to run at all, he was directing it at the winner of the primary — his Democratic rival and current 9th district Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur, whom Kucinich blamed for a very heated campaign:
“That’s not who I am …Our politics have to be lifted up. They don’t belong in the gutter.”
Kucinich may have had beef, but he was missing the point. There was dirt on both sides, but Kaptur and Kucinich were forced to slop like pigs for the 9th district because, after the 2010 Census revealed a mass population exodus — over 17% of the population in Cleveland alone — a newly drawn 9th was born. As you can see, it is an overcooked noodle of a district laid along Lake Erie, encompassing 47% of Kaptur’s current territory, and 40% of that represented by Kucinich.









