World ON THE COVER Election from page A21 The Democrats Obama Reaches For Jewish Support Barack Obama has made Jewish leaders an early stop at every stage in his politi- cal career. In his first run for the Illinois Senate in 1996, he sought the backing of top Chicago lawyer Alan Solow. Eight years later, run- ning for the U.S. Senate, one of his first meetings was with Robert Schrayer, a top Jewish philanthropist in Chicago. When he launched his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination in late 2006, he named as his fundraising chief Alan Solomon, the Boston Jewish philanthropist who helped Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., to the Democratic candi- dacy in 2004. And he chose a March gathering of AIPAC to deliver his presidential candi- dacy's first foreign policy speech. "Some of my earliest and most ardent supporters came from the Jewish com- munity in Chicago," Obama said in 2004, after his keynote speech galvanized the Democratic convention in Boston. Three years later, addressing the National Jewish Democratic Council's candidate's forum, he made the same point when he was asked about his ties with Arab Americans and Muslim Americans in Chicago. "My support within in the Jewish community has been much more significant than my support within the Muslim community;' Obama said, adding that "I welcome and seek the support of the Muslim and Arab commu- nities." His Jewish followers are fervent, distributing "Obama '08" yarmulkes early in his campaign. His star status and the relationships Obama has built in the community have helped avoid murmurings about his otherwise notable divergences from pro- Israel orthodoxies. In his AIPAC speech, for example, Obama favored diplomacy as a means of confronting Iran's suspected nuclear weapons program. A few weeks later, Obama drew more rubberneckers than any other candidate attending AIPAC's policy forum in Washington, drawing away onlookers from Hillary Clinton. No one winced when he said that Palestinian needs must be considered in working out a peace deal. He made the same point at the NJDC event. "It is in the interests of Israel to establish peace in the Middle East;' he said. "It cannot be done at the price of compromising Israel's security, and the United States government and an Obama presidency cannot ask Israel to take risks with respect to its security. But it can ask Israel to say that it is still possible for us to allow more than just this status quo of fear, terror, division. That can't be our long-term aspiration." Obama tempers his deviations from pro-Israel orthodoxy by going the extra mile in areas where he agrees with groups such as AIPAC. He has led the effort in the Senate to pass legislation that would assist U.S. states that choose to divest from Iran. His top Middle East adviser is Dennis Ross, who had the job during the Clinton administration and who since has prin- cipally blamed the Palestinian leadership for the failure of the Oslo peace process. And in recent speeches, Obama tweaked his pro-Israel rhetoric to echo the recent drive by the Israeli govern- ment and pro-Israel groups to insist on recognition of Israel as a Jewish state. On domestic issues, Obama is savvy about Jewish social justice commitments and is on a first-name basis with two of the top Jewish religious lobbyists in Washington — Rabbi David Saperstein of the Reform movement and Nathan Diament, who represents the Orthodox Union. Public policy groups are likelier to favor Hillary Clinton's uncompromising approach on universal health care, as opposed to Obama's plan to build con- sensus on the issue. Obama's appeal is in his broader vision, according to Solomon. Connect, Disconnect With Edwards In 2004, John Edwards lost the Democratic presidential nomination because he was considered a foreign policy lightweight. He won the vice presidential slot because his social policies had depth. Four years later, Edwards' social and domestic positions remain pretty much the same — positions that are favored by the vast majority of American Jewish voters. His foreign policies now have substance, too. That's what worries some Jewish voters. Off the record, Jewish orga- nizational leaders say they are alarmed by Edwards' about-face on Iran. In January 2007, the former North Carolina senator spoke via videocast to the Herzliya Conference, the annual gather- ing of top Israeli and U.S. foreign policy specialists. "For years, the U.S. hasn't done enough to deal with what I have seen as a threat from Iran:' Edwards told the confer- ence, known to be top heavy with neocon- servatives. "To ensure that Iran never gets nuclear weapons, we need to keep all options on the table. Let me reiterate — all options must remain on the table." Edwards' remarks set off a firestorm on the Democratic Party's left, particularly among blog- gers. This was the party base Edwards was cultivat- ing with his "two Americas" domestic policy on poverty. Two weeks later, Edwards told the American Prospect, a liberal monthly, that attacking Iran "would have very bad consequences." He went on to elaborate: "It would be foolish for any American president to ever take any option off the table." But above all, he favored direct negotiations with Iran. Edwards' stance is anathema to much of the pro-Israel establishment, which views direct negotiations as a means for Iran to buy time and develop a nuclear weapons pro- gram. In the American Jewish Committee poll taken in November, Edwards scored 38 per- cent in approval ratings, in a dead heat for third with Democratic rival Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill. Clinton led with 53 percent, followed by Giuliani at 41 percent. It probably didn't help that Edwards' campaign chairman is David Bonior, a former member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Michigan who has a history of being a tough critic of Israel. Shortly after announcing the choice in late 2006, Bonior sent out feelers to top pro- Israel donors, assuring them that his focus was not foreign policy. "For years I have argued that the United States has not been doing enough to deal with the growing threat in Iran," Edwards told AIPAC in 2006. "While we've talked about the dangers of nuclear terrorism, we've largely stood on the sidelines as the problems got worse." Significantly, he included his "two Americas" pitch on poverty in the same speech — a curious pitch to a crowd that is all foreign policy all the time. Or maybe not so curious: No American sub-electorate, save perhaps for blacks, is as attuned to Edwards on domestic policy as is the Jewish community. The tough talk on Iran and on poverty drew applause at the AIPAC confab. Edwards strongly favors universal, mandatory health care and expanding tax credits for child care and higher educa- tion — issues that resonate with domestic Jewish lobbyists in Washington. He has drawn strong Jewish support; his top fundraiser is Fred Baron of Texas, like Edwards, a prominent trial lawyer. A22 January 31 • 2008 - Ron Kampeas, JTA - Ron Kampeas, JTA