V. ‘' tkw , `Righteous Democrat' Vote for Bush and a Democratic Congress, says Mayor Koch. HARRY KIRS BAUM Staff Writer A s the mayor of the Big Apple from 1978 to 1989, Ed Koch said he led the Democratic Party in New York City to the moderate center, and President Bill Clinton took the party in the same direction on the national level. "Now it's back in the hands of the McGovernites, and it's shameful that the party has deteriorated," he said. Koch has recently been stumping before Jewish voters for President George W. Bush's re-election campaign. He has visited Detroit three times in the past two weeks, including a speech that drew nearly 600 people at a rented venue at Congregation Beth Ahm in West Bloomfield. Linda Stulberg of Farmington Hills introduced Koch and also provided some personal perspective. "Like many of my liberal peers, I have pulled the . lever for a Democrat in every presidential election since I've been eligible to vote," she told the crowd. ‘ "I'm crossing the line because the line has been crossed," she said. She went on to explain that in the fires caused by the downed airplanes that had been turned into missiles by terrorist hijackers on 9-11, she also saw blazing hatred and evil, such as generated currently by suicide bombers in Israel and during World War II by the Nazis. "George Bush understands that evil cannot- be appeased," she said. "He is committed to securing America by waging a direct assault against the terror- ists and the countries that harbor and sponsor them." She said that Bush "also appreci- ates that Israel is fighting much the same war that we are." She called Koch a "righteous Democrat," a man who "dug deep into his American heart and his Jewish soul" to publicly campaign for the re-election of President Bush even though he "has never before voted for a Republican president." Koch's message was the same at all three local events: Vote for President Bush, then•vote for a Democratic C ongress. "John Kerry is a decent man, but he made a deci- sion that, to be president, he has to accept the posi- tion of Howard Dean because those are the people who are running the party," he told the Jewish News after a luncheon sponsored by the Republican Jewish Coalition in Southfield on Oct. 11. "It's nothing to do with [Kerry's] courage; of course, he deserves every medal he got. It has to do with his philosophy, his philosophy is that of Howard Dean and the Deaniacs.'" Koch called it a lack of appreciation of American Linda Stulberg of Farmington Hills and Marc Weinbaum of Bloomfield Twp. listen as Ed Koch addresses the crowd values. "How can they be so protective of Saddam Hussein?" he asked. "It was right to invade Iraq on the grounds that they had weapons of mass destruc- tion, that they were a center of terrorism and that there was danger in the foreseeable future that they could give those weapons of mass destruction to terrorist groups like Al Qaida. They want to kill us. While the Democrats are dominat- ed by the radical left, Koch said the Republican Party is controlled by the radical right in domestic policy. "I'm hopeful on domestic issues that Democrats will prevail," he said. "Congress determines the outcome of domestic issues, so with a Democratic Congress, you can get what you want done there. Under our Constitution, foreign policy is determined by the president." "George Bush understands that evil cannot be ,, appeased.. Linda Stulb erg 10/29 2004 24 33 Terrorism Trumps Other Issues Koch said he does not agree with the president on a single srocial issue, but those issues all are trumped by the legitimate concern of international terrorism. Citing withdrawal of Iraq War coalition troops or civilian employees from Spain, the Philippines and Turkey, Koch said, "the Islamic fanatics have • already caused a change in foreign policy." He also said Jews should support Bush because, "every night there's a Jewish community that's in danger, and only Israel is willing to take them." Katie Jacob of Birmingham stood outside Beth Ahm holding Kerry for President signs with other John Kerry supporters, but made-it inside to hear the end of Koch's speech. She fervently disagrees with Koch's support of the president. , "President Bush has not made us safer, he's made us less safe," she said. "He made the case Eor the war in Iraq based on false and trumped-up infor- mation. Now we're stuck in a quagmire, in spite of his own national intelligence estimate that came out this summer saying that it's more likely Iraq is headed into civil war than to democracy in Iraq. But he continues to claim. Iraq is a success. "About 250 innocent Iraqis are being killed every day, and the war on terrorism wasn't about them," she said. "Saddam Hussein was a bad guy, but he wasn't involved in 9-11." Marc Weinbaum, chair of the Michigan Jewish Coalition for the Bush Campaign, called Ed Koch's Beth Ahm speech compelling. "This is a man who has nothing to gain by sup- porting the president. In fact, he probably has much to lose," said Weinbaum of Bloomfield Township. "He summed it up .pretty clearly, the - issues that we face in the world trump some of the domestic concerns that we rightly have." ❑