Thursday, 7 October 2010
Fundamentally Freund: Time to rein in Obama
By MICHAEL FREUND,
The Jerusalem Post -October 7, 2010
For the sake of Israel and its future, supporters of the Jewish state
need to tame the administration and its arrogance at the ballot box.
In less than a month, American voters will go to the polls in what is
shaping up to be a decisive midterm election. The entire House of
Representatives and more than a third of the Senate will be up for
grabs, as Republicans and Democrats duke it out for control of the
legislative branch.
For pro-Israel Jews and Christians, this election couldn’t come at a
more opportune moment. After more than a year-anda- half of the
administration’s unprecedented bullying of Israel, those who cherish
the relationship between America and the Jewish state will now have a
chance to send a loud and clear message.
To put it bluntly: It’s payback time, and Israel’s supporters should
teach President Barack Obama a lesson by giving his party a stinging
rebuke at the ballot box in November.
The stakes in this election are particularly high, as the Democrats
face the prospect of losing their hegemony over one or both houses of
Congress, which would be an enormous blow to their agenda to reshape
America.
And by all accounts, things are not looking too good for Obama and his
party. The Democrats, it appears, are about to be slammed by the
political equivalent of a tidal wave, amid rising discontent over a
weak economy and lackluster recovery. Various key figures in the
party, including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, may be
swept away. Earlier this week, Reid slipped behind his Republican
opponent Sharron Angle in the polls.
WITH THE races heating up, pollsters and pundits are predicting a
further surge in support for the Republicans. As Michael Barone, the
Washington Examiner’s senior political analyst and one of the savviest
observers of American elections, noted earlier this week, the data
suggest a Republican majority brewing in the House “the likes of which
we have not seen since the election cycles of 1946 or even 1928.”
Over in the Senate, the party of Lincoln and Reagan stands to make
significant gains as well. According to Real- ClearPolitics’ composite
average of various polls, the Republicans will pick up at least eight
seats, placing them within striking distance of an outright majority.
Another four seats are said to be tossups; if the GOP can pick up two
or three of them, it’s game over.
The real dissatisfaction, of course, is with the president himself,
who has predictably failed to live up to the near-messianic hype that
surrounded his rise to power. As a result, Obama is poised to get a
painful reproof from the very same electorate that embraced him just
two years ago.
This admonition must also come from Jews as well, some 78 percent of
whom are said to have voted for Obama in 2008. And there could be no
better way to deliver that message than by joining hands to help
Republican candidates prevail across the country.
The president has lambasted Israel at the UN and pressured it to make
concessions to the Palestinians, even as he has courted the Muslim
world and virtually pleaded for engagement with the atomic ayatollahs
in Iran. Obama and his crew have shown themselves to be tonedeaf to
Israel and its concerns, and it’s time they paid a political price.
Indeed, even some of the president’s most stalwart Jewish supporters
have turned against him. Earlier this year, former New York City mayor
Ed Koch told Fox News that “I have been a supporter of President Obama
and went to Florida for him, urged Jews all over the country to vote
for him, saying that he would be just as good as John McCain on the
security of Israel. I don’t think it’s true anymore.”
A growing number of American Jews seem to concur. In August, the Pew
Research Center issued the results of a survey which found that the
number of Jews identifying as or leaning Republican has reached 33%
a leap of more than 50% since the 2008 elections.
This is the highest such figure ever recorded.
Sure, Jews represent a small percentage of the electorate. But their
concentration in key states such as Florida, California and New York
gives added weight to their votes. And it’s no small secret that
Jewish donors play a critical role in bankrolling numerous political
campaigns on both sides of the aisle. This clout and influence must
now be brought to bear with all its force in the vote next month.
Politics, after all, is a game of messages.
Sometimes they must be implicit while at other times only an
unambiguous reprimand will do. For the sake of Israel and its future,
supporters of the Jewish state need to tame the administration and its
arrogance at the ballot box as unequivocally as they can.
It is time to punish Obama politically, as scary as that may sound to
some people.
Doing so will weaken his position, constrain his freedom of movement,
and force him to devote more time and energy to domestic political
battles.
And with his eye toward re-election in 2012, it may just give him
pause to consider whether squeezing Israel is good for his own
political future.
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