ASHINGTON — Ask about Barack Obama's
natural constituencies, and you might hear that
he's the first black with a viable shot at the
White House; or about his Kenyan father and his
childhood in Indonesia; or the youthfulness of
his followers; or the millions of Oprah junkies
swooning over his candidacy. What you might not
hear is that the Illinois senator, who made
history Thursday by winning the Democratic
caucus in Iowa, has made Jewish leaders an early
stop at every stage in his political career.
In his first run for the Illinois Senate in
1996, he sought the backing of Alan Solow, a top
Chicago lawyer. Eight years later, running for
the U.S. Senate -- long before he became the
shoo-in, when he was running in a Democratic
field packed with a dozen candidates, including
some Jews -- 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 fund-raising chief Alan Solomont, the
Boston Jewish philanthropist who helped shepherd
Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) to the Democratic
candidacy in 2004.
And he chose a gathering of the pro-Israel
lobby, the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee, last March to deliver his
presidential candidacy's first foreign policy
speech.
"Some of my earliest and most ardent supporters
came from the Jewish community in Chicago,"
Obama told JTA 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 at the
April forum, adding: "I welcome and seek the
support of the Muslim and Arab communities."
His Jewish followers are fervent, distributing
"Obama '08" yarmulkes early in his campaign.
His rock-star status as well as the
relationships Obama has built in the community
have helped avoided 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. "While we
should take no option, including military
action, off the table, sustained and aggressive
diplomacy combined with tough sanctions should
be our primary means to prevent Iran from
building nuclear weapons," he said.
AIPAC does not oppose diplomacy in engaging
Iran, but dislikes it as an emphasis, believing
that talks could buy the Iranian regime
bomb-making time. But his words did not stop the
Chicago hotel ballroom packed with 800 AIPAC
members from cheering Obama on.
A few weeks later, Obama drew more rubberneckers
than any other candidate attending AIPAC's
policy forum in Washington -- drawing away
onlookers from Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.)
although she outpolls Obama among Jewish voters.
No one winced when he said that Palestinian
needs must be considered in working out a peace
deal, although that's hardly standard AIPAC pep
talk.
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."
Early in his campaign, he handily killed an
Israel-related controversy in its early stages.
At a chat he had said that "no one has suffered
more than the Palestinians."
Blame the leadership was what he meant, he later
explained: "What I said was, nobody has suffered
more than the Palestinian people from the
failure of the Palestinian leadership to
recognize Israel, to renounce violence and to
get serious about negotiating peace and security
for the region," Obama said during an MSNBC
debate.
Obama tempers his deviations from pro-Israel
orthodoxy by going an 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 has since
principally 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 government and pro-Israel groups to
insist on recognition of Israel as a Jewish
state.
"I think everyone knows what the basic outlines
of an agreement would look like," he said in a
speech redistributed by his campaign. "It would
mean that the Palestinians would have to
reinterpret the notion of right of return in a
way that would preserve Israel as a Jewish
state. It might involve compensation and other
concessions from the Israelis, but ultimately
Israel is not going to give up its 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.
But that connection is not enough to supplant
Clinton among Jewish voters. In a recent
American Jewish Committee poll, his favorable
rating was 38 percent, while hers was 53
percent.
Clinton also has most of the Jewish
congressional delegation backing her. Her years
as first lady and as senator have made her a
more familiar presence among Jews. Public policy
groups are likelier to favor her uncompromising
approach to pushing universal health care, as
opposed to Obama's appeal to build consensus on
the issue.
Obama's appeal is in his broader vision,
according to Solomont.
"This election will be about change: a change in
government and the way politics is conducted,"
he told JTA last May. "There is a connection
between gridlock and the smallness of our
politics."
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