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Organized nationally and regionally in groups with innocuous-sounding names like CARE — Citizens Ad. vocating Responsible Edu- cation — and CEE — Citizens for Excellence in Education, these candidates have been running suc- cessfully for seats on school boards, local Republican committees, water commis- sions and real estate zoning boards. These "stealth" can- didates earned their moniker because individuals running for office cloak their affiliation with the Chris- tian organizations until they are safely in office. "They bury their stealth message beneath honeyed words," said Maxine Cohen, director of the Jewish Com- munity Relations Council in San Antonio, Texas. While they have been par- ticularly successful in California, Texas, Florida, Minnesota and Mississippi, they are also advancing in Northeastern cities, in- cluding Philadelphia and New York. CEE, which was started in 1989, has 925 chapters around the country and was able to get 1,965 of its can- didates elected in 1990, ac- cording to Jodyne Roseman, chair of the San Diego Jew- ish Community Relations Council. Roseman spoke at the an- nual plenum of the National Jewish Community Rela- tions Advisory Council, held in Washington Feb. 13- 17. CEE has promised to get 3,500 more of its candidates elected in 1994, she said at a session on "Responding to the Resurgent Christian Right in Local Schools and Grass-Roots Politics." But perhaps the most im- portant group on the Chris- tian religious right, which spawned many of the local efforts, is the Christian Co- alition, which grew out of Pat Robertson's failed 1988 presidential bid. It was after November 1988 that Ralph Reed, the founder and head of the Christian Coalition, who was then Robertson's polit- ical director, turned his sights from presidential con- tests to the underpinnings of national political success -- t local races. His group says it now has 250,000 members in 550 chapters nationwide. In the last few years its candidates have won a large number of the races they have entered. People for the American Way, a liberal, Washington- based group, monitored 500 local races last year. The Christian Coalition- endorsed candidates won in 42 percent of those races, said Matthew Freeman, di- rector of research for the watchdog group, in an inter- view. And their goal, ultimately, is to have a national impact. They want to "take over the Republican Party by the year 2000," according to Beth Rickey, formerly a member of the Louisiana State Republican Com- mittee, and founder of the Louisiana Coalition Against Racism. They want to use the Republican party "as their vehicle for creating a Chris- tian nation," she told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. In the meantime, running as "stealth" candidates in local races, they make their views known quickly once elected. Once on school boards, for example, they advocate school prayer, teaching crea- tionism in science classes, removal of books with con- tent they consider profane and eradicating AIDS edu- cation in favor of teaching abstinence. They say that "AIDS edu- cation may lead to (sexual) experimentation, that critical thinking spiritually destroys children, that schools are atheistic institu- tions, and that the First Amendment is for the freedom of religion, not freedom from religion in schools," said Ellen Faust, chair of the Jewish Com- munity Relations Council of Greater Dayton, Ohio. In Dayton-area elemen- tary and middle schools, fundamentalist Christians "demanded to go through classroom shelves book by book," she said. Classroom "discussion of Halloween was limited be- cause of its association with witchcraft. "And teachers were asked for their lesson plans. Teachers have felt that the pressure is leading to self- censorship," she said. "They are looking for allies." According to Roseman from San Diego, where two- thirds of the Christian Co- alition candidates won in 1990 local races, the funda- mentalists' agenda even in- cludes the removal of sub- sidized breakfast and lunch programs and health care clinics at schools. They want to get rid of "anything even approaching They are advancing in northeastern cities. the traditional role of parents," she said. Despite its deep in- volvement in school board activities, CEE "is really committed to eliminating public education. In 1994 they intend to push for the voucher system,-" which would enable parents to use federally provided vouchers to send their children to pri- vate and parochial schools, said Roseman. In addition to the agenda which is anathema to most of the Jewish community's - concerns, many of the re- ligious-right groups are also anti-Semitic, according to Louisiana's Rickey. "They share conspiratorial beliefs and believe Jewish people are in a conspiracy to control the world. They also use the word 'liberal' inter- changeably with Jew,' " she said. In trying to counter the success of the "stealth" strategy, the Jewish com- munity faces several challenges of its own. First, the candidates' af-