ELECTION '84 CONGRESSION AL RACES THAT AFFECT JEWS Here and there around the country, a number of legislative jobs are up for grabs, and many of them are vital to our interests. BY ARTHUR J. MAGIDA Special to The Jewish News North Carolina's Jesse Helms: Urged U.S to - shut down" rela- tions with Israel if it did not withdraw from Beirut. Bank is "the block to a com prehensive settlement" of the Arab-Israeli problem. During the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon, Helms proposed that the U.S. "shut down re- lations with Israel" if Prime Minister Menachem Begin did not agree to a ceasefire in Beirut. Helms is next in line to suc- ceed Charles Percy as chair- man of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. With Percy's reelection fairly shaky, there is a good chance that Helms might replace him. But Helms has said at least three times that he would remain as head of the Agriculture Committee rath- er than move to the head of Foreign Relations. the president carries the state by about 60 percent, there's a good chance he'll bring Helms into office along with him. Since entering the Senate in 1973, Helms has voted al- most consistently against Is- rael. He backed the 1978 and 1981 sales of armaments to Saudi Arabia and has op- posed virtually every aid pro- gram for Israel. In 1979, Helms said that Israel's insistence on "retain- ing control" of the West Helms was galvanized last Spring when his opponent, Jim Hunt, charged that a third term for Helms could produce an anti-Israeli chair- man of Foreign Relations. Helms showed up in the Se- nate on May 16 with a promi- nent right-wing member of the Knesset, Michael Kleiner, and formally introduced him on the Senate floor. The next day, he said the U.S. "should never pursue any plan that envisions a separation of the West Bank from Israel." The U.S. he also said, should ith the entire House and a third of the Senate up for re- election, at least 11 congres- sional races around the coun- try could affect U.S.-Israeli relations. Some of these con- tests could decide the chair- manship of key congressional committees. Others could propel into the national spotlight politicians who have the potential to become leaders on Capitol Hill and could even find their way in- to the White House. HELMS vs. HUNT Perhaps the tightest — and, certainly, the noisiest — race is between one of the darlings of the Moral Majori- ty, Senator Jesse Helms, and North Carolina's second-term governor, Democrat Jim Hunt. Despite one of the costliest media blitzes in the country, the Helms/Hunt race has been neck-and-neck for months. Until Walter Mondale's recent surge in the polls, Hunt kept his distance from the Democratic presi- dential candidate, while Helms did his best to hang onto Ronald Reagan's coat- tails. North Carolina is ex- pected to go. for Reagan. If . move its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. In his eight years in the North Carolina governor's mansion, liberal Jim Hunt has established a program for scholars from Israel and North Carolina to teach and study in each others' coun- tries. He has also created the North Carolina Council on the Holocaust. Hunt has stated that Israel is "one of America's strongest friends and surest allies." U.S. military and economic aid to Israel, he said, "is a sound in- vestment" that reflects a "moral and strategic commit- ment." with the polls showing him ten points ahead of Growe, Boschwitz clearly has the edge. And with the senator's campaign coffers overflowing with about $5 million to Growe's $1 million, he clear- ly has a better — and easier — chance of getting his message across to voters. BOSCHWITZ vs. GROWE Another member of the Foreign Affairs Committee, Minnesota Republican Rudy Boschwitz, has a better chance than Helms of retur- ning to the Senate. A Jew born in Germany in 1930, Boschwitz is a passionate defender of Israel. As chair- man of Foreign Affairs' Near Eastern Affairs Subcommit- tee, Boschwitz is well placed to push for Israel. For in- stance, he has militantly fought the Administration's sale of AWACS to Saudi Ara- bia and its plans to enhance F-15's already sold to the Saudis. He charged that the Saudis wished to turn the F-15's into offensive wea- pons. One staff member of a pro-Israeli group in Washing- ton said Boschwitz is "al- most a lobbyist for Israel on the Senate floor." Boschwitz' opponent, Joan Growe, appears to be as pas- sionately pro-Israel as the in- cumbent. Many Minnesota Jews are backing her because they disapprove of Bosch- witz ' conservative record on most non-Israeli issues. But Minnesota's Rudy Boschwitz: "Almost a lobbyist" for Maryland's Clarence Long: A friend of Israel who heads a key House subcommittee. LONG vs. BENTLEY Pro-Israel activists in Wash- ington say that the re-election of Rep. Clarence Long (D-Md.) is at the top of their priority list. That's because Long, an 11-term Congressman, heads the House Subcommittee on Foreign Operations which doles out U.S. aid to foreign governments. Long has been extremely active and outspo- ken in supporting Israel throughout his career. But Long is vulnerable this year. He's 75 now and he was redistricted two years ago so that hardly any Jews are in his district. Further, his opponent, Helen Delitch Bentley, a former maritime reporter and Federal Maritime Administra- tion head, received 47 percent of the vote last time around. She readily admits that foreign policy and the Mideast are not her major concerns; she's based her campaign on dredging the Baltimore harbor and creating new jobs. Long is running hard this year and has received much support from Jews around the country. In fact, about 75 per- cent of his campaign chest of about $450,000 has come from Jewish contributors. If Long loses, Rep. David Obey (D-Wis.) would probably succeed him as chairman of Foreign Appropriations and Continugck on Page _2.6...