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Politics : The Iraq War And Beyond

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To: Ed Huang who wrote (319)8/12/2003 12:31:01 AM
From: BubbaFred  Read Replies (1) of 9018
 
They are all peons of the judeofascists.

"Lieberman Losing to Bush Among Jewish Donors"

Posted by Jean Shaw
Thursday, July 10, 2003

Ralph Z. Hallow, writing for The Washington Times, examines whether the dearth of financial support among Jews for Democratic candidate Joe Lieberman, is due to competition from President Bush.

Joe Lieberman, who is seeking the Democratic presidential nomination for 2004, isn't breaking any records for collecting campaign contributions from fellow Jews.

In theory, the senior senator from Connecticut has a lot going for him as the only Jew among the nine Democrats in the intensifying hunt for the 2004 nomination.

But some of his co-religionists also say Jewish donors feel drawn to President Bush, who is turning out to be the best friend Israel has ever had in the Oval Office.

''The smart political money in the Jewish community right now is sitting on the sidelines or supporting the president,'' says Lee Cowen, a Washington-based Jewish fund-raiser.

''Joe Lieberman has one problem: George W. Bush,'' says Rep. Eric Cantor, Virginia Republican. ''Bush is the strongest president on U.S.-Israel relationships we've ever had.''

Mr. Cantor, chief deputy Republican whip, says Mr. Bush ''is more committed to Israel as a Jewish state than any other president.''

''That is fundamental when it comes to Jewish voting patterns for 2004,'' he said.

Mr. Cantor, who is Jewish and was elected from a district that is only 1 percent Jewish, said: ''At the end of the day, Jews are coming to realize they can't afford to be Democrats.''

Perhaps, but Republicans have been making empty predictions about winning the Jewish vote for 80 years. Warren G. Harding was the last Republican to pull a majority of the Jewish vote. That was in 1920. Ronald Reagan won 39 percent of the Jewish vote in 1984.

More typical was 1992, when a dismal 11 percent of the Jewish vote went to the first President Bush. His son has embraced Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, ousted Israeli nemesis Saddam Hussein from Iraq, and visited the World War II concentration camp at Auschwitz.

As a Texas Republican and born-again Christian, Mr. Bush embodies a combination not usually the first choice of Jewish voters. By contrast, Mr. Lieberman is an Orthodox Jew and, like most Jewish voters and donors, a Democrat. Jewish Democrats have the historic chance to help make Mr. Lieberman the first Jewish presidential nominee in either party and perhaps the first Jewish president.

Yet, Mr. Lieberman, though well-known nationally as Al Gore's running mate in 2000, estimated Wednesday that on the official reporting date of July 15, his campaign will tell the Federal Election Commission that he has raised only something more than $5 million from April through June of this year.

''Right now, Israel is first and foremost in the minds of American Jews because its very survival is at stake,'' says Mr. Cowen, who helped Maryland Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr., a Republican, raise money from Jewish donors last year. ''That loyalty and concern for Israel transcends partisan politics.''

Jewish Republicans and some Democrats are catching whiffs of a trend toward the Republican Party. A Jewish Republican, former St. Paul Mayor Norm Coleman, won an upset Senate victory in Minnesota over better-known Democrat Walter F. Mondale last year.

In the Maryland governor's race last year, Mr. Ehrlich won majorities of some traditionally Democratic western suburbs of Baltimore with large Jewish constituencies. Republican Gov. George E. Pataki did well among Jews in his re-election in New York; Mr. Sheinkopf, the Jewish consultant, called that a tectonic shift. And Gov. Jeb Bush did well with Florida Jews.

Led by Republicans, the House leadership is the most vigorously pro-Israel in recent memory.

''[Majority Leader] Tom DeLay [of Texas], Roy Blunt [of Missouri] and Mr. Cantor have really worked above and beyond the call of duty on Israel's behalf,'' Mr. Cowen says. ''Republicans absolutely are doing better with Jews, in part because of Bush's position on Israel. He is by far the most pro-Israel president we have had, period.''

That is a claim that neither Mr. Lieberman nor his supporters can make. Matthew Brooks, executive director of the Republican Jewish Coalition, says that in the last two weeks of fund-raising events by Mr. Bush, in communities like Los Angeles, New York, Washington and Miami, there has been ''significant and highly visible participation by the Jewish community.''

''In at least three of those events, the invocations were done by local rabbis,'' Mr. Brooks notes.

While Mr. Lieberman has raised a total of about $8 million so far, Mr. Bush has raised at least $34.2 million — including about $22 million at fund-raisers in the past two weeks.

chronwatch.com
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