j
j advertisecontact usabout us  
search
j J, The Jewish news weekly of Northern California
j
Newsletter
Subscriptions
Change_Address

news
columns
letters
views
the arts
calendar
lifecycles
torah

supplements
classifieds
web links
candlelighting times
personals


Home
     
 

Friday November 5, 2004

Some Jewish groups fear GOP gains could hamper

by matthew e. berger
jta

washington | Jewish groups say they are expecting much the same in Congress over the next two years, with little legislative progress on their top domestic policy priorities.

At the same time, the new Congress, with 11 Jewish senators and 26 Jewish representatives, is expected to remain strongly pro-Israel.

With Republicans strengthening their hold on both the House of Representatives and Senate, liberal Jewish groups are taking solace in the fact that Republicans would hold fewer than 60 votes in the Senate, giving Democrats an option to block legislation through a filibuster.

That could be crucial over the next few years on several issues, including Senate confirmations of U.S. Supreme Court justices. The illness of Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist and the age of others could mean several new appointments in the next few years.

Most Jewish organizations look to Democrats for support on their domestic agenda items. In the past several years, with Republicans holding majorities in Congress, and the focus on tax cuts and defense rather than domestic spending, little new money has flowed to the social welfare causes many Jewish groups advocate for.

That trend, analysts and Jewish activists say, is likely to continue.

“I think many of our domestic issues, how we fund programs, are in big trouble,” said Hannah Rosenthal, executive director of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, the umbrella group for Jewish community relations councils.

She said Medicaid, a federal health-care program for the needy and disabled, was at the top of the list of programs likely to suffer.

Other health-care priorities, as well as Social Security reform and funding for educational programs, could take hits as well.

Some Jewish officials said they expected the focus in Washington to remain on homeland security and foreign affairs, further hampering the Jewish domestic agenda.

“The president and the country is engaged in a war against terrorism, a war in Iraq, a lot of priorities internationally that I think will engage the Bush administration for the next several years and probably not enable them to get too proactive on the domestic agenda,” said Jack Rosen, president of American Jewish Congress.

But these officials expect that the new Congress would remain supportive of Israel and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s plan to disengage from the Palestinians by withdrawing from the Gaza Strip and parts of the West Bank.

“By and large, the people who are coming in are people who are known to people in the community,” said Howard Kohr, the executive director of the pro-Israel lobby, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

The Supreme Court is also on the minds of many Jews. The court may hear cases in the next few years on late-term abortion and the line between church and state, and as many as four seats on the bench could open up during the next president’s term.

President Bush’s election means it will be he who appoints any new justices in the next four years, but Democrats — who hold more than 40 seats in the Senate — could filibuster any selection they view as too conservative.

“I think that process right now, to filibuster extreme nominees, is a good measure that can be taken if need be,” said Sammie Moshenberg, director of the Washington office of the National Council of Jewish Women.

Some Jewish activists said they hoped that Bush would cross party lines and reach out to moderates.

They were also encouraged that Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), a Jewish moderate re-elected to a fifth term Tuesday, would lead the Senate Judiciary Committee, which holds hearings on nominated justices.

But Orthodox leaders said they would miss Specter’s predecessor at that committee’s helm, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah). Hatch, a more conservative lawmaker, was forced to vacate the committee chair because of term limits.

Nathan Diament, director of the Orthodox Union’s Institute for Public Affairs, suggested Democrats would need to reach out to faith groups.

“The Orthodox segment was courted by the Bush campaign and very supportive at the polls of the president’s re-election,” Diament said.

“We expect to be able to pursue and promote the interests of our community — many of which are bipartisan — over the next couple of years.”

Orthodox Jews appreciate a social agenda that rejects abortion and promotes more federal funding for religious institutions, often parting ways with a majority of other Jewish groups

Indeed, the Nov. 2 results suggested a majority of people in the country are comfortable with faith, and Democrats may need to work to gain a larger foothold in that community.

The Orthodox Union has led Jewish groups in backing the Workplace Religious Freedom Act, a bill that would provide new protections for religious people to practice their faith at work.

The bill has languished in Congress for years and, although it made progress this year, it did not pass. Jewish groups say this legislation remains a priority, and the pro-faith tone may aid that battle.

Jewish advocates also expect Bush to continue to push faith-based initiatives, both through Congress and the federal bureaucracy. A stronger Republican Congress will hurt many Jewish groups that oppose the plan, and aid the Orthodox groups that back it.

Republicans have also supported a Jewish initiative to give federal homeland security funding to Jewish and other nonprofit organizations, including houses of worship.

Several Jewish groups led the charge for the legislation, which has passed the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee but needs to be made permanent. However, it is opposed by both the Reform and Reconstructionist movements, and the Anti-Defamation League.


ELECTION 2004:
THE JEWISH VOTE


Bush gets 24 percent of Jewish vote — less than GOP hoped for

Victory gives president mandate for change — but not in Mideast

Israelis prefer Bush: ‘He knows what terrorism is’

Congress says goodbye to two Jews, hello to two new Jewish women

Time to unite our country

Jewish legislators in the 109th Congress




Did you find this article interesting? Subscribe to our FREE newsletter and you'll be notified each week when "J." goes online. We'll tell you about the most important stories of the week and give you a link to each one.

This page contains a BETA version of Amazon contextual links. They are marked by the dashed underline.  Your purchases support our site. At times they point to items which are not related to the actual link. Please alert us by email if you discover objectionable links.

 

Get hard-to-find
Kosher Items!


Featured Jobs powered by JewishCareers.com
More Local Jobs Post Jobs Post Your Resume Search Jobs


     
  Copyright ©2007, San Francisco Jewish Community Publications Inc., dba J. the Jewish news weekly of Northern California. All rights reserved.    

Advertise | Contact Us | About Us | News | Features | Columns | Letters | Views | The Arts
Calendar | Lifecycles | Torah | Supplements | Classifieds | Web Links | Candlelighting | Personals | Back Issues | Home