Anyone who hasn't read Studs Terkel's 2002 article "Kucinich Is the One" should do so.
http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20020506&s=terkelStuds reflects on his 1978 interview with Kucinich, then the 32 year-old "Boy Mayor" of Cleveland.
Here's some of what Dennis told Studs in '78 (bolding added by me):
"MUNY Light has 46,000 customers in Cleveland. MUNY Light and CEI compete in most neighborhoods, street by street, house by house. MUNY Light's rates in the recent decades have been from 20 to 60 percent cheaper than CEI's, but MUNY Light's competitive advantage has depreciated over the years because of CEI's interference in MUNY's management.
From the moment Mr. Weir told me his price, I decided that a fiscal default was better than a moral default. If I had cooperated with them and sold MUNY Light to the private utility, everyone's electric rates would've automatically gone up. It would have set the stage for never-ending increases, much the same way that Fort Wayne, Indiana, is faced with that problem after relinquishing its rights to a municipal electric system.
I was hoping I was doing the right thing in holding my ground. I had to tell 'em no. I felt they were trying to sell the city down the river. They were trying to blackmail me.
If I went along with the deal, they made it clear, things would be easy. Mr. Weir said he'd put together $50 million of new credit for the city. The financial problems would be solved. My term as mayor would be comfortable and the stage set for future cooperation between myself and the business community. The media picked up the tempo. Why the heck don't you get rid of MUNY Light? I was asked on a live TV show. I replied that MUNY Light was a false issue. It wasn't losing money. Its troubles could be traced to CEI's interference. I was in office a little over a year and had inherited a mess. The city had a plan to avoid default, to which five of the six banks agreed: an income-tax increase, as well as tighter control of the management of the city's money. That's one of the reasons I got elected.
I knew I was risking my whole political career. But you gotta stand for something."
Anybody else hear Bob Dylan singing "You Gotta Serve Somebody"?
It's because of who he has served -- and who he has NOT served -- that I support Dennis Kucinich.