ie almost certainly be tapped for a higher for- eign policy post. One of the most influential Jews in the current administration is also one of the least visible. William Kristol, who once served as chief of staff to former Education Secretary William Bennett, is now the top aide to Vice President Dan Quayle. Mr. Kristol, accord- ing to sources, is the administration's top li- aison to the hard-core conservative community, a group that is essential to Mr. Bush's reelection strategy. More impor- tantly, Mr. Kristol has emerged as one of the shrewdest and most sophisticated play- ers in Washington. If there is a second Bush administration, Mr. Kristol is likely to take on a more visi- ble and important role at the White House. Former Sen. Rudy Boschwitz, who was defeated by Democrat Paul Wellstone in 1990, has always enjoyed a close relation- ship with George Bush, his ideological soul- mate. Mr. Boschwitz served as the president's personal emissary in the delicate negotia- tions that resulted in the release of Ethiopi- Eli Segal, chief of staff, was George McGovern's assistant campaign ma nager. an Jews last year. The former legislator is his client roster is lengthy. Among the notables are ardently pro-Israel, but he is also committed to pro- the Sierra Club, Common Cause, Public Citizen and moting free-market economic reform in Israel, a per- spective that pleases the president. the Michigan Education Association. Last month, when Bush-Quayle strategists became concerned about winning Jewish votes in a few key states, the president personally requested Mr. Boschwitz's assistance. In recent weeks, the former senator, a co-chair of the overall Bush-Quayle cam- resident Bush's closest circle of advisers draws paign, has been stumping energetically for the GOP mostly from his coterie of wealthy Texas ticket. If Mr. Bush is reelected, there is widespread friends — like White House Chief of Staff speculation that he could be in for a top spot in a sec- James Baker — and from the Eastern WASP ond Bush administration — in all likelihood, a cabinet establishment. But there are a few Jews who position. have good access to the president, and some of these Few Jewish community activists have ready access could have an impact on a second Bush administra- to Mr. Bush. But one who does is Gordie Zacks; his tion. ties to George Bush go back to the late 1970s. Mr. Za- With Mr. Baker now directing the reelection effort, cks is chairman of the RG Barry Corporation in the top officials hovering in Mr. Baker's foreign poli- Columbus, Ohio, and is a former vice president of the cy orbit are poised to take on more important roles American Jewish Committee. should Mr. Bush win. The most prominent Jewish fig- Other big names backing Mr. Bush are Jacob Stein, ure in this group is Dennis Ross, who headed the Bush a New Yorker who served as chairman of the Con- foreign policy transition team after the 1988 election. ference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations Later, he served as Mr. Baker's chief of policy plan- and as Jewish liaison for the Reagan White House; ning at the State Department. Max Fisher, a Detroit industrialist equally connect- Mr. Ross, according to veteran State Department ed to Jewish causes; and George Klein, a former vice observers, was the department's leading "conceptu- president of the Jewish Community Relations Coun- ali zee' — the man who provided the broad vision that cil of New York. led to the Middle East peace talks. When Mr. Baker When President Bush sought to express his "an- left the State Department to take over the president's guish" over the pain caused in the Jewish communi- faltering campaign, Mr. Ross followed. ty by his 1991 news conference at which he blasted Mr. Ross, who generally enjoys good ties to the or- pro-Israel forces, he wrote a letter to Mr. Klein. ganized Jewish world, is an influential player in the Mr. Fisher currently serves as honorary financial administration, and if Mr. Bush is reelected he would THE BUSH GANG p co-chair of the campaign. He has longstanding ties to the campaign's general chairman, former Commerce Secretary Robert Mosbacher. During the Nixon ad- ministration, Mr. Fisher and Fred Malek, the Bush- Quayle campaign manager, had adjoining offices in the White House. But all three are one-issue advisers to the presi- dent; Mr. Bush has turned to them on questions re- lating to the Jewish community, but generally not on broader policy questions, according to sources. On an operational level, the key Jewish figure on the Bush-Quayle reelection team is A. Mark Neuman. Mr. Neuman, who played an active role in the last Bush campaign, now coordinates the Bush-Quayle "coalitions" team — the part of the campaign that tar- gets specific minority and interest groups, including the Jewish community. Mr. Neuman is a former deputy director of the Na- tional Jewish Coalition, the central organization for Jewish Republicans. More recently, he served as di- rector of congressional affairs for the Census Bureau. Marshall Breger, now solicitor general of the La- bor Department, also has good access to the White House inner circle. Mr. Breger served as special as- sistant for public liaison to President Reagan, with special responsibility for relations with the Jewish community. PEROT'S POSSE exas billionaire Ross Perot has run an un- conventional campaign and unlike the other candidates he has not developed a broad cadre of advisers. And since his fo- cus has been almost entirely domestic, Mr. Perot has not built a serious foreign policy team. The result has been a muted Jewish voice in the Perot campaign. Mr. Perot's most visible Jewish backer is longtime business associate and friend Morton Meyerson, a Texas businessman and philanthropist who joined Mr. Perot's Electronic Data Systems Corporation in 1966. Before Mr. Perot stunned his supporters by pulling out of the race in July, Mr. Meyerson was the candi- date's primary spokesman in the Jewish community. Since Mr. Perot's reentry into the race, Mr. Meyerson has played a somewhat less visible role, but remains the closest thing Mr. Perot has to a confidante — and he dearly identifies with the Jewish community. Before he dropped out in July, Mr. Perot had won a handful of converts from the Jewish community — including journalist Marilyn Berger, who was slat- ed to head up his Middle East advisory team, and political scientist Amos Perlmutter. But few have re- turned to support his recycled candidacy. pr