Nowhere are Republican efforts to transform support for Israel from a
long-standing bipartisan national consensus into a divisive partisan wedge issue
more on display than in Illinois’s Ninth Congressional District
race.
Since both candidates are Jewish and pro-Israel, Republican
challenger Joel Pollak can’t call the incumbent, Rep. Jan Schakowsky, a
Democrat, an anti-Semite or an enemy of Israel, so he accuses her of cavorting
with them.
Specious charges like that plus over-the-top rhetoric earned
him rebukes from both Chicago newspapers, which emphatically endorsed Schakowsky
for a seventh term.
Schakowsky, 66, represents Chicago’s North Side and
northern suburbs, including Skokie and Evanston. She was born, raised and had
her bat mitzva in the ninth district, which is about 10 percent Jewish and has a
large number of Holocaust survivors. Pollak, 33, who is Orthodox, was born in
South Africa, emigrated to the US in 1977 and became a citizen 10 years
later.
He has been endorsed by the Tea Party movement and she by J
Street, the pro- Israel/pro-peace lobby, and the Joint Action Committee for
Political Affairs, a Chicago-based pro- Israel/pro-women’s rights group, and
that tells much of what separates them.
Pollak’s penchant for
name-calling led the Chicago Tribune to tell him to “dial down the disdain for
people who disagree with him.”
And the Chicago Sun- Times chided him for
his “right-wing scornful rhetoric” and called him an opportunist
.
Undeterred, he has continued to attack his opponent as “the most
extreme left-wing member of Congress,” “the #1 biggest spender in the House of
Representatives,” the “worst in the House on economic growth and national
security,” a “hypocrite” and an “ideologue” who “represents the worst of
Washington.”

POLLAK BOASTS of endorsements by Tea Party groups; the
notorious Islamophobic blogger Pamela Geller; Alan Dershowitz, his former
Harvard professor; and Rep.
Paul Ryan, the GOP’s new economic voice who
advocates draconian cuts in federal spending that would shred the social safety
net, replace progressive income tax with flat tax, privatize social security,
replace Medicare insurance with a voucher system and repeal the health care
reform law.
Pollak and Schakowsky also differ on immigration, the minimum
wage, climate change, gun control, abortion, the Iraq war and taxing the
wealthy.
But instead of honing in on these issues, Pollak has chosen to
focus most of his energy on attacking Schakowsky as weak on her support for
Israel although the American Israel Public Affairs Committee has praised her
“excellent record” and the Chicago Sun-Times said his attempts to portray her
“overwhelmingly strong pro- Israel voting record” as anything less are
“nonsense.”
His strategy may be understandable in light of a conservative
agenda that seems out of step with much of the district that has been sending
liberals to Congress since before either candidate was born.
Pollak’s
tactics are founded less on facts than on a Republican strategy of turning
support for Israel into an emotionally charged partisan wedge
issue.
Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren has called this Jew-vs.-Jew
strategy harmful to his country’s interest in building broad bipartisan support.
A non- Jewish politico following the race said that Pollak risks opening rifts
in the Jewish community that “create opportunities for non-Jews to be more anti-
Israel.”
One big reason Republicans are trying to “out- Israel” Democrats
is because they have so few other issues appealing to Jewish voters and they
carry the baggage of the radicals of the religious right and the Tea
Party.
Even in this year of recession, frustration and antiincumbent
anger, the latest American Jewish Committee poll of Jewish voters shows that
despite some decline, they still prefer the Democrats by a margin of
three-to-one.
In recent election cycles, GOP outreach groups,
particularly by the Republican Jewish Coalition, have spent millions on fear and
smear campaigns to paint Democrats as soft on Israel, if not outright
dangerous.
Their bitter anti-Obama campaign in 2008 backfired, actually
enhancing support for the Democratic presidential nominee in places like
Florida.
Pollak accuses Schakowsky of supporting anti-Israel groups,
cozying up to Israel’s foes and people like President Barack Obama, who Pollak
told me “has not behaved” as a friend of Israel but instead has “made it
acceptable to hate Israel.”
Pollak has been scornful of Schakowsky’s
support from J Street. When I asked him about his support for the peace process,
he questioned Palestinian leaders’ commitment to peace, saying it is “not a
priority” for them.
He sounds to the right of Prime Minister Binyamin
Netanyahu and more like his Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, who says he’s in
favor of peace, but not for the foreseeable future and not before the
Palestinians meet his standards of good behavior.
This should be one of
the most closely watched races this fall, a test of whether divisive GOP tactics
on the Israel issue can sway Jewish voters – and whether those voters will be
turned off by a raging Tea Party movement, as most analysts
predict.
bloomfieldcolumn @gmail.com
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