(C', • '* Running To Win , A v F r • 4, ,\ Specter Supporters In Michigan? The Pennsylvania senator is an unknown in this state. JENNIFER FINER STAFF WRITER arlier this week, Harriet Rot- ter, a Franklin attorney and Republican activist, wrote a check to the Specter for Pres- ident Campaign. Even if Sen. Men Specter does not gain the backing he needs to become a serious candidate, Ms. Rotter, a staunch supporter of pro-choice candi- dates, believes financially supporting E Harriet Rotter supports pro-choice Republicans. the senator sends a there-are-pro- choice-Republicans message to the Republican Party. With the campaigns of 1996 presi- dential hopefuls still in their infancy, Sen. Specter has yet to establish a base of support in Michigan and some Re- publicans doubt he ever will. Many leading Republicans, includ- ing state party officials, said they do not know of anyone backing Sen. Specter. "I think people are not supporting him because he is not a serious candi- date," said Jim Alexander, a Republi- can activist and former chairman of the Republican Committee of Oakland County. On the other hand, "we've received several spontaneous contributions from Michigan and the Detroit area," said Charles Robbins, a spokesperson with the Specter campaign. "But the fact is we have not made a push in Michigan and, as a result, we have not yet generated the big- name support." Mr. Robbins said Sen. Specter has not scheduled any state appearances but "has no intentions of ignoring Michigan." Last Sunday, Ms. Rot- ter was attending a birth- day party in Washington, D.C., where the hostess asked guests to consider supporting Sen. Specter because of his views on abortion. "People took out their checkbooks and im- mediately wrote checks for his campaign," she said. "It's crucial the party understand there are tons of us (pro-choice Republi- cans) and we are not go- ing anywhere, regardless of what the leadership of a minority group of the party has to say," said Ms. Rotter, who plans to contribute to the campaign of California Gov. Pete Wil- son, another pro-choice Republican, should he enter the race. "So far, Arlen Specter is the only out- spoken pro-choice candidate, and the fact that he is Jewish makes him doubly appealing," Ms. Rotter said. "It looks as though other presiden- tial candidates are better-known, but I remember where Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton were at this point in their campaigns," she said. s . liAkr qtfr-" s VWF:', O PAZ W AI ing in the race for only about three months, that's a pretty good position. Gramm was at about 9 percent, [former Ten- nessee Gov. Lamar] Alexan- der at about 5. So I'm satisfied that we're making progress." But he concedes that "there is an issue of difficulty here, given the fact that I am pro- choice, and the party is ap- parently moving in the other direction. The others are re- ally kowtowing to the fringe. And they have a lot of control over party conventions." He expects to capitalize on his image as a tough prose- cutor in a political climate in which fear of crime is a ma- jor factor. On the campaign trail, he is criticizing Presi- dent Clinton as "inexperi- enced, frequently inattentive and even more frequently in- decisive in foreign policy." The Jewish Record Jewish voters are obvious- ly ones that Mr. Specter hopes to pull into his political tent. He hopes that they will be attracted by his war against the Christian right and by his long years of pro-Israel leadership in the Senate. Supporters also talk about the quiet work he has done on behalf of Jews in the former Soviet Union. "From the very beginning, in the early '70s, he was with us," said Joseph Smuk- ler, a leader in the Soviet Jewry move- ment in Pennsylvania. "He was instrumental in convincing the Soviets to let many of our people in; he went to the Soviet Embassy personally many times to try to get visas." But there is a nagging question in Mr. Specter's candidacy. Is the country ready for a Jewish president? One of the most intriguing aspects of Sen. Arlen Specter's run for the Repub- lican presidential nomination in 1996 is that it has elicited almost no public talk about his Jewishness. Mr. Ginsberg of Johns Hopkins agrees that the time may be right to break that last barrier to full Jewish participation in American society. "A strong Jewish candidate would be very much in the running," he said. "And a Republican Jewish candidate might si- lence some of the forces that would nor- mally be unwilling to vote for a Jew." Mr. Specter's own answer was more blunt. "Hell, yes," the candidate said. "It's time someone like Arlen Specter tried." Game Plan Mr. Specter's basic strategy for winning the nomination will be his usual one: he plans to simply work harder than any- body else. "I participated with him in his 1992 campaign, which was especially ferocious," said former Chief of Staff Carl Feldbaum. "He didn't turn over every rock, he turned over every grain of sand. He went from earliest morning to late at night. His at- titude was, win or lose, he was going to use every iota of energy he had. And he has more than most; he's absolutely tire- less." Since throwing his figurative yarmulke into the ring in November, Mr. Specter has traveled to 14 states; he has raised more than $1 million for his presidential bid, and he has established official cam- paign committees in New Hampshire and Iowa. Chuck Brooks, a former Specter aide,