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November 18, 1994 - Image 63

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-11-18

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

caused fits for pro-Israel groups
on foreign aid issues.
But the likely ascension of Sen.
Jesse Helms, R-N.C., to the chair
of the Foreign Relations Com-
mittee, along with the growing
isolationist mood in Congress,
could make foreign aid — in-
cluding Israel's $3.2 billion an-
nual allotment — more difficult
to pass.
"Those of us who actively pro-
mote the pro-Israel agenda will
have to work much harder now,"
said Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y., a
leading defender of Israel in the
House appropriations committee.
"We'll be working with a new cast
of characters. But I'm ready for
it. It will be a personal mission to
talk to every new member about
Israel."
Jewish groups also suffered'a
big loss with the passage of
Proposition 187, a California bal-
lot initiative that will — if it sur-
vives expected court challenges
— deny basic health and educa-
tion services to illegal aliens and
their children.
`This vote has dangerous im-
plications," said Martin Wenick,
executive director of the Hebrew
Immigrant Aid Society (BIAS), a
group that fought the initiative.
"It's the result of an angry pop-
ulation that is lashing out with-
out understanding the basic
issues."
Proposition 187 could produce
anti-immigrant, anti-foreigner
legislation when the new Con-
gress gets down to business, said
Diana Aviv, Washington director
for the Council of Jewish Feder-
ations.

11
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A House
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In the House, the election was a
disaster for the informal Jewish
caucus.
In Pennsylvania, Democratic
Rep. Marjorie Margolies-Mezvin-
sky lost by a hair to Jon Fox, a
Republican who is also Jewish.
Ms. Mezvinsky was particu-
larly vulnerable because of her
critical support for President
Clinton's first-year budget re-
duction package.
In one of the biggest surprises,
Rep. DanGlickman, the Kansas
Democrat who heads the power-
ful Intelligence Committee, lost
to state senator Todd Tiahrt. Mr.
Glickman, a 9-term veteran, had
not been considered particularly
vulnerable, and his opponent was
heavily backed by anti-abortion
and pro-gun groups.
Rep. Eric Fingerhut, D-Ohio,
a leading House freshman and a
UJA Young Leadership Cabinet
alumnus, was deposed by Lake
County prosecutor Steve La-
Tourette, a Republican. "That's
a huge loss for our community,"
said political consultant Mark

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