Another voice for impeachment

From ABC News’ Political Punch:

Congressman Robert Wexler, D-Fla. — the Florida co-chair for the presidential campaign of Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill. — today announced that he has signed on to support the Articles of Impeachment against President George W. Bush, introduced this week by Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio.

“President Bush deliberately created a massive propaganda campaign to sell the war in Iraq to the American people and the charges detailed in this impeachment resolution indicate an unprecedented abuse of executive power,” Wexler said. “A decision by Congress to pursue impeachment is not an option, it is a sworn duty. It is time for Congress to stand up and defend the Constitution against the blatant violations and illegalities of this Administration. Our Founding Fathers bestowed upon Congress the power of impeachment, and it is now time that we use it to defend the rule of law from this corrupt Administration.”

Here are Kucinich’s 35 counts and a video of him reading them in Congress.

UFOs are irrelevant

The headline in Dick Feagler’s column in The Cleveland Plain-Dealer says it all: “So Dennis Kucinich saw a UFO; what’s the big deal?”

As he says,

If true, this sounds no worse than the illusions that instructed the Bush administration.

They smelled something or felt something or heard something that sent us into Iraq. Are they cuckoo, too?

Well, yes, they are, but that’s another issue. Kucinich may be quirky, but on the issues that matter — getting out of Iraq, a national single-payer healthcare system — he is the sanest man in the race.

More from Feagler:

I don’t know what, if anything, Dennis said to Shirley MacLaine about a spaceship sighting. But I do know, thanks to the Internet, what a lot of people say about Dennis. Not here, maybe, but around the country. A lot of people like him because they think he’s talking straight. And that’s rare. And a lot of his straight talk is what a lot of people want to hear.

The last congressional election was supposed to be all about ending the war in Iraq. That was a year ago.

If you’ve watched these beauty contests, aka presidential debates, you might have been surprised to see that Iraq has become a second-tier issue.

But not for Dennis. He still wants out, ASAP.

If they’re still on speaking terms, Eleanor Roosevelt might have told Hillary to say she was sorry for voting to help plunge this nation into a bottomless war.

But being in love with yourself means you never have to say you’re sorry. If you’re up in the polls, that helps, too. Millions in your war chest helps more. But what helps most is a campaign consultant who urges you not to say what you really think.

So Hillary’s version of her war vote goes like this. (It’s familiar because she plagiarized it.) “I did not have sex with that war.”

Make fun of Dennis all you want. He can’t win. But he says what he means. That’s enough in this dismal political morass called a campaign, to bring me a slight whiff of roses.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

E-mail me by clicking here.

Finally, someone notices Dennis

I’ve written before about Boston Globe columnist Derrick Z. Jackson, so everyone who reads this blog knows I think he’s one of the best columnists going.

Today’s column is a case in point. He writes about the only presidential candidate on either side of the aisle offering a real plan for fixing the mess of a healthcare system we have in the United States, Dennis Kucinich.

On healthcare, he says what Americans believe, even as his rivals rake in contributions from the industry.

In a CNN poll this spring, 64 percent of respondents said the government should “provide a national insurance program for all Americans, even if this would require higher taxes,” and 73 percent approve of higher taxes to insure children under 18. Those results track New York Times and Gallup polls last year, in which about two-thirds of respondents said it is the federal government’s responsibility to guarantee health coverage to all Americans.

Such polls allow Kucinich to joke that, far from being in the loony left, “I’m in the center.

Everyone else is to the right of me.” More seriously, in a recent visit to the Globe, he accused the other Democratic candidates of faking it on healthcare reform.

“One of the greatest hoaxes of this campaign — everyone’s for universal healthcare,” Kucinich said. “It’s like a mantra. But when you get into the details, you find out that all the other candidates are talking about maintaining the existing for-profit system.”

Jackson goes onto explain why the rest of the candidates seem willing only to nibble around the edges — if at all.

The hold of the healthcare industry on the top candidates is already apparent. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, the top recipient of campaign contributions so far from the pharmaceutical and health products industry is Republican Mitt Romney ($228,260). But the next two are Democrats Barack Obama ($161,124) and Hillary Clinton ($146,000). The top recipient of contributions from health professionals is Clinton ($990,611). Romney is second at $806,837, and Obama third at $748,637.

The top recipient of cash from the insurance industry, which includes health insurers, is another Democrat, Connecticut’s Christopher Dodd, at $605,950. Romney and Republican Rudolph Giuliani are second and third, with Clinton and Obama fourth and fifth. Even though Obama is in fifth place, he still has collected $269,750 from insurance companies.

In a category that is relatively small in money thus far, but huge in terms of healthcare morality, Democratic presidential candidates occupy four of the top six spots in receiving money from death-dealing tobacco companies. After Giuliani’s $69,500 from tobacco companies, Dodd has received $45,400, Clinton $32,300, Romney $31,400, Obama $7,885, and Democrat Joe Biden, $4,000.

When the top Democratic candidates take tobacco contributions, it is hard to see them truly believing, as Kucinich says, that healthcare “is the single-most important domestic issue. . . a defining issue in the presidential race.”

The top recipient from lobbyists by far is Clinton at $406,300. She is still so badly smoldering from the torching of her healthcare efforts as first lady that she recently asserted to the National Association of Black Journalists, “I have never advocated socialized medicine. That has been a right-wing attack on me for 15 years.”

Her comment is telling, of course. True liberals would not fight a right-wing attack by retreating, as Clinton does, they would follow Kucinich’s lead and fight for real reform.

That assumes they believe in universal health care and are not behold to the folks with the cash.

***

Here are my two most recent columns on health care from The Progressive Populist — here and here — and a link to a radio interview I did on America’s Work Force Radio (click on Archived shows, go to August and click on the show for the 8th).

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

E-mail me by clicking here.