http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/399596.html(snip)
Last Thursday, Kucinich participated in a public debate between the candidates, in California. The first question put to him by Larry King, who moderated, was: "Congressman Kucinich, why are you here?" Kucinich, a Democratic congressman from Ohio, and the most liberal and left-wing of the candidates, is used to being treated with that type of disdain. Speaking to Haaretz a day later, he said that the media had already made one mistake in the Democratic race when they eulogized Kerry. "It's hard being a reporter covering the Democratic race because you need a sense of prophecy that most human beings don't have. I have a lot of compassion for them," he said.
Both Kucinich's positions and his style are unconventional. He is the most vociferous opponent of the war in Iraq, and the most vociferous critic of the Bush administration's preemptive strike; and he has very atypical positions also about internal and economic affairs. While the other candidates have called warily for some kind of general health insurance for every citizen, Kucinich believes that the federal government should take charge of such insurance, an idea which Americans, who believe in a non-interventive administration, can hardly comprehend.
Moreover, at a time when Kerry and Edwards have barely touched on the subject of American trade agreements and their effect on the economy, Kucinich has a clear picture of what should be done: to pull immediately out of the North American Free Trade Agreement, the World Trade Organization and all other economic treaties to which Washington is a signatory.
The 56-year-old Kucinich does not look like a future president. He is short, dresses in unconventional clothes (some say sloppily), and is a vegan. Unlike the other candidates, he does not have a supportive wife at his side. Instead, he goes on highly publicized dates during the race, in the hope of winning not only the presidency but also true love.
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The Iraq war is also Kucinich's main card against the other candidates. "They are trying to be for the war and against it at the same time," he says about Kerry and Edwards, who voted in favor in Congress. In any event, the two leading candidates do not consider Kucinich a threat and do not relate to his claims.
Kucinich has a very unconventional point of view in the field of foreign policy. He believes that the Americans, who have a large Defense Department with huge budgets, should set up an equally large Peace Department. "It might seem naive," he admits, but says there is no region in the world that needs more urgent help understanding that people cannot go on killing each other forever than the Middle East.
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