Dennis Kucinich is the most liberal Democrat in the US House of Representatives.
Political Positions of Dennis Kucinich
Domestic Policy Voting Record
Kucinich helped introduce and is one of 87 cosponsors in the House of Representatives of the United States National Health Insurance Act or HR 676 proposed by Rep. John Conyers in 2003,[21] which provides for a universal single-payer public health-insurance plan.
His voting record is not always in line with that of the Democratic Party. Kucinich voted against the USA PATRIOT Act, against the Military Commissions Act of 2006,[22] and was one of six who voted against the Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Act. He also voted for authorizing and directing the Committee on the Judiciary to investigate whether sufficient grounds existed for the impeachment of Bill Clinton.
Kucinich criticized the flag-burning amendment and voted against the impeachment of President Clinton. His congressional voting record has leaned toward a pro-life stance, although he noted that he has never supported a constitutional amendment prohibiting abortion altogether. In 2003, however, he began describing himself as pro-choice and said he had shifted away from his earlier position on the issue.[25] Press releases have indicated that he is pro-choice and supports ending the abstinence-only policy of sex education and increasing the use of contraception to make abortion "less necessary" over time. Since 2003 his voting record has reflected his pro choice stance.
He has criticized Diebold Election Systems (now Premier Election Solutions) for promoting voting machines that fail to leave a traceable paper trail, and posted internal company memos on his website in which company executives promised to deliver the 2004 Ohio election to Bush.[26] He was one of the thirty-one who voted in the House to not count the electoral votes from Ohio in the United States presidential election, 2004.
Foreign Policy Record
Kucinich has criticized the foreign policy of President Bush, including the 2003 invasion of Iraq and what he perceives as growing American hostility towards Iran. He has since voted against funding it 100% of the time. In 2005, Kucinich voted against the Iran Freedom and Support Act, calling it a "stepping stone to war." The congressman also signed a letter of solidarity with Hugo Chávez in Venezuela in 2004.
He advocates the abolition of all nuclear weapons calling on the United States to be the leader in multilateral disarmament.[30] Kucinich has also been a strong opponent of space based weapons and has sponsored legislation, HR 2977, banning the deployment and use of space-based weapons.
Kucinich advocates U.S. withdrawal from the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) because, in his view, it causes the loss of more American jobs than it creates, and does not provide adequate protections for worker rights and safety and environmental safeguards. He is against the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) for the same reason.
Kucinich is also in favor of increased dialogue with Iran in order to avoid a militaristic confrontation at all costs. He expressed such sentiments at an American Iranian Council conference in New Brunswick, New Jersey which included Chuck Hagel, Javad Zarif, Nicholas Kristof, and Anders Liden to discuss Iranian-American relations, and potential ways to increase dialogue in order to avoid conflict.
He believes the U.S. should move aggressively to reduce emissions that cause climate change due to global warming[34] and should ratify the Kyoto Protocol, a major international agreement signed by over 160 countries to reduce the amount of greenhouse gases emitted by each signatory.
Kucinich and Ron Paul are the only two congressional representatives who voted[36] against the Rothman-Kirk Resolution,[37] which calls on the United Nations to charge Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad with violating the genocide convention of the United Nations Charter based on statements that he has made. Kucinich defended his vote by saying that Ahmadinejad's statements could be translated to mean that he wants a regime change in Israel, not death to its people and supporters, and that the resolution is an attempt to beat "the war drum to build support for a U.S. attack on Iran."
Kucinich is the only congressional representative to vote against[39] the symbolic "9/11 Commemoration" resolution.[40] In a press statement[41] he defended his nay vote by saying that the bill did not make reference to "the lies that took us into Iraq, the lies that keep us there, the lies that are being used to set the stage for war against Iran and the lies that have undermined our basic civil liberties here at home."
In a visit to the rest of the Middle East in September 2007, Kucinich said he did not visit Iraq because "I feel the United States is engaging in an illegal occupation."[42] Kucinich was criticized for his visit to Syria and praise of the President Bashar al-Assad on Syria's national TV.[43] He praised Syria for taking in Iraqi refugees. "What most people are not aware of is that Syria has taken in more than 1.5 million Iraqi refugees," Kucinich said. "The Syrian government has actually shown a lot of compassion in keeping its doors open, and being a host for so many refugees."
Despite Kucinich's committed opposition to the war in Iraq, the Congressman did vote to authorize President Bush broad war making powers in the days following the September 11, 2001 attacks.[45] The Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Terrorists, has been cited by the Bush Administration in its justification for suspension of habeas corpus in the Guantanamo Bay detention camp and its wiretapping of American citizens under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. Kucinich voted along with 419 of his House colleagues in favor of this resolution, while only one Congresswoman opposed, Representative Barbara Lee.
liberal democratic party
The state that began with the most number of representatives in the House of Representatives is Virginia. When the House was first established, Virginia had the largest population among the states, and therefore was allocated the most representatives.
The most powerful committee in the United States House of Representatives is The House Rules Committee
The floor leaders (aside from the Speaker of the House in the House of Representatives).
As of 2014, the state of California has the most representatives in the US House. California has 53 representatives.
The leader of the House of Representatives is called the Speaker of the House. The Speaker is elected by other members of the House and thus typically belongs to the party holding the most seats.As of January 2011, the Speaker of the House is Republican John Boehner of Ohio.
the Speaker of the House.
Not really. Most objective sources would say he is a centrist Democrat-- he is liberal on some social issues, and conservative on issues such as defense.
liberal vs. conservative, which somewhat correlates to Democrat vs. Republican
Speaker of the House
The state that sends the most members to the House of Representatives is California, with a total of 53 representatives. California also has the most electoral votes, with a total of 55.
The institution of ombudsman was designed for this purpose.