Jerusalem Post

America: Hot on the hill 
By  _HILARY LEILA  KRIEGER_ (mailto:[email protected])   
08/06/2010  16:06 

Pro-Israel voters  express anger with Democrats. 

WASHINGTON – Congress went  on recess this week, meaning that the pace of 
Washington has slowed, but the  intensity of campaigning has heated up. All 
members of the House are facing  re-election, as well as a third of the 
Senate, and the dog days of summer don’t  allow any time for torpor.

Indeed, as the temperature outside rises, so  has that of pro-Israel voters 
who are turning out to town halls and candidate  meet-and-greets to call 
for greater backing of Israel and to express displeasure  to Democrats because 
they feel US President Barack Obama has not sufficiently  supported the 
Jewish state.

“I didn’t get as many e-mails or phone calls  in the last years as I was 
starting to get in the last eight months,” said Steve  Rothman, a New Jersey 
Democrat, on the Israel issue.


And Alan  Dershowitz, a prominent pro-Israel activist who himself has for 
the first time  endorsed a Republican running for Congress based largely on 
concerns over his  Democratic opponent’s Israel record, said he has been 
inundated with concerns  and complaints at his public events.

“Wherever I go I hear it from  people… They’re planning, for the first 
time in their life, to vote Republican  or stay home,” he said. “It’s a very 
serious concern for people like me who are  lifelong Democrats and lifelong 
supporters of Israel.”

Many Democratic  members with solid records on Israel are finding that they 
have to defend  themselves and field hostile questions on the issue.

The dynamic is  playing out in a host of campaigns across the country, 
particularly as  Republicans have sought to use the issue to challenge 
incumbents. Though most  Democratic members of Congress this session have 
strongly 
backed aid to Israel,  Iran sanctions and other issues important to the 
pro-Israel community, they have  been bearing the brunt of criticism over 
tensions 
between the US and Israel that  many have blamed on US President Barack 
Obama’s approach.

“Although  President Obama’s not on the ballot, he’s the head of the 
party. So certainly  those who want to try to defeat President Obama, what he’s 
fighting for, will  try to make this an issue for local Congressional 
candidates or Senate  candidates,” noted Ron Klein, a Florida Democrat who 
finds 
himself in a tough  re-election campaign. “We all have to make our own case.”

Though Obama  came into office with 78 percent of the Jewish vote according 
to exit polls, he  had to overcome serious skepticism from some quarters of 
the Jewish  community.

He faced criticism on certain policy grounds – such as his  willingness to 
reach out to Iran and lack of a long Israel record – but also  questions 
over his ties to black liberation minister Jeremiah Wright and  Palestinian 
scholar Rashid Khalidi.

“From the get-go I was suspicious of  Obama,” said Paul Krouse, a Jewish 
voter in Illinois, citing in particular his  concerns over the influence 
Wright had on Obama’s views on Israel.

Krouse ended up voting for Obama, deciding to “give him a chance.”  But, 
he said, “Within a month or 40 days [in office] he starting pandering to  the 
Arab world, and I don’t think he’s let up since.”

In this  election, Krouse is backing the Republican Mark Kirk in his quest 
for the  Senate. Even though Obama is in charge of the executive branch, not 
the  legislative, Krouse sees a vote for a Democrat as endorsing Obama’s  
policies.

“If they’re going to vote down the line with their party, which  supports 
the president, then I have no interest in supporting them,” he  said.

Attitudes like Krouse’s have made many Democratic members sure to  stress 
their Israel bona fides and, if necessary, to distinguish themselves from  
the president.

Confronted with questions about Obama and Israel at an  Orthodox synagogue 
in Palm Beach last month, Klein told the audience, “When I  don’t agree 
with him [Obama] on specific issues, I say so publicly and have  looked him in 
the eye and told him.”

While that’s not the kind of  sentiment that’s usually greeted with 
equanimity by party officials or those  sitting in the White House, one 
Democratic 
operative said that those groups are  giving some room to candidates like 
Klein who are in close races where they  can’t afford to lose pro-Israel 
votes.

“There’s certainly an  understanding, given that he and others like him 
are in a particularly tough  election environment,” said the operative, who 
asked to remain  unnamed.

That extends to the candidates’ coffers, too, where Jewish  political 
activists make some of their deepest impact, though many Democrats  downplay 
the 
numbers.

One candidate raising money this year put the  fundraising loss due to 
Israel issues at “probably less than a two- to  four-percent reduction – so it’
s something but not a whole heck of a  lot.”

According to the candidate, who spoke on condition of anonymity,  “They 
still want pro-Israel folks to be re-elected whether they had some  questions 
about Obama or not.”

And any trouble with pro-Israel voters can  also be a reflection of the 
problem Democrats are facing among the electorate at  large, where Obama’s 
sinking poll numbers and a grinding recession have many  expecting disaster 
come 
fall.

Still, Rothman said that for all that the  US-Israel issue has come up, he 
believed the tide has turned and that pro-Israel  voters are more receptive 
to the president in recent weeks.

He said that  attitudes among his constituents have improved since Obama 
hosted Prime Minister  Binyamin Netanyahu in a very warm meeting in July, 
coupled with outreach to the  Jewish community and other visible efforts to 
improve the tone towards  Israel.

“To some degree there is remaining skepticism, but it is much,  much less 
than it was even two months ago,” Rothman said. “I’m hopeful that over  the 
coming months the entire pro-Israel community will have any doubts about  
President Obama’s commitment to Israel  eliminated.”

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to