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Wednesday, May 19, 2010

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Joel Pollak, Harvard Law School, 2009, is running for Congress in Illinois' 9th District, facing a 100%, lock step J Street opponent, Jan Schakowsky. Schakowsky has received thousands of dollars from the J Street PAC along with such anti-Israel ideologues as Keith Ellison, Maurice Hinchey and Donna Edwards. If she is truly interested in dialogue and presenting her views on the survival of Israel, we urge her to take up the challenge and debate Joel.

Ms. Schakowsky is, like J Street, unaware of the danger of the effects of The Goldstone Report when she says:

We beg to differ.  Because of the wide acceptance of "Hanging" Judge Goldstone's exculpatory report on Hamas, the question of Israel's right of self defense is very much in question.  And J Street's refusal to condemn the report reflects poorly on Ms. Schakowsky.  Read more about the J Street PAC recipient.

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In Lockstep with J Street's Dangerous Agenda

Joel Pollak Comments:

"On several recent occasions, I have bumped into representatives of J Street, a new lobby group that tries to counter what it sees as the prevailing pro-Israel orthodoxy in Congress. Our exchanges were polite, though I do not agree with J Street's positions. J Street opposed Israel's decision to go to war against Hamas in Gaza; it dragged its feet on sanctions against Iran; and it refused to condemn the libelous Goldstone Report.

J Street also supports President Barack Obama's hostile approach to Israel, which has made peace more difficult, ironically. J Street insists it is both pro-Israel and pro-peace. Perhaps that is a sincere feeling. Yet there is not a single Israeli flag or symbol on J Street's web page. And J Street's college program recently dropped "pro-Israel" from its slogan. That doesn't mean J Street is anti-Israel, but it's an odd way to show support.

Michael Oren, Israel's ambassador to the United States, put it more bluntly, saying that J Street was "a unique problem in that it not only opposes one policy of one Israeli government, it opposes all policies of all Israeli governments. It's significantly out of the mainstream." I understand that J Street has tried to moderate its approach since then, but its positions remain quite radical. In my view, they would endanger Israel's security.

It is also important to acknowledge J Street's origins. In 2007, when John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt wrote their deeply prejudiced book The Israel Lobby, they concluded by calling for a new lobby group to counter groups like the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). Others on the far left, such as George Soros, joined the attack on AIPAC and called on the Democratic Party to "liberate itself" from the pro-Israel group.

That is the context in which J Street was born. It was inspired and supported by people who wanted to weaken the close bonds between the United States and Israel. Indeed, J Street continues to support the idea that American pressure on Israel is necessary to achieve peace. I don't believe that is a defensible position after more than fifteen years of difficult Israeli concessions, especially in the aftermath of the Gaza disengagement.

J Street's leaders argue that they are providing greater space for debate on Israel in Washington and within the Jewish community. That is perhaps a noble goal, but in my experience J Street has yet to prove its commitment to it. Each time I have met J Street members, I have told them I would be happy to address their group if they would invite Rep. Jan Schakowsky as well, so that we could have a real debate about the issues.

Each time, they have declined. That has left me with the feeling that J Street is more interested in creating an impression of debate than in actually debating. Specifically, J Street wants to show that the American Jewish community does not speak with one voice on Israel. That was already true--there have always been diverse opinions--but J Street wants to advertise that point, apparently to blunt the prevailing pro-Israel view.

Rep. Jan Schakowsky has developed a close alliance--perhaps a dependence--on J Street. She is one of J Street PAC's top money recipients in the 2010 election cycle. In February, Rep. Schakowsky helped open the Chicago chapter of J Street, declaring in a recorded message to the gathering: "I've been a supporter of J Street since its inception, and I'm proud to be among J Street's first round of endorsed candidates."

Last October, Rep. Schakowsky also co-hosted J Street's first gala dinner and spoke on a panel at its conference in Washington. She proudly told the audience that she ignored those in her district who had warned her not to attend the conference ("It was never under consideration for me to pull out," she declared). She did not protest when other panelists lamented the allegedly distorting role of Jewish money in American politics.

Perhaps it is only a coincidence that Rep. Schakowsky's new campaign website shares J Street's teal color scheme. Yet it is not a coincidence that several J Street members were seen at Rep. Schakowsky's Chicago fundraiser last week, which featured Helen Thomas, whose anti-Israel views are well documented. Rep. Schakowsky has not taken the trouble to distance herself from Thomas's views on Israel. Nor has J Street.

I'd like to renew my offer to J Street, formally and publicly, to participate in a debate or panel discussion anywhere in the 9th congressional district, focusing on issues related to Israel and featuring each of the candidates, including Rep. Schakowsky. There are several bipartisan pro-Israel groups in the Chicago area that host candidate forums. That is what pro-Israel groups do, in the interest of open debate. How about J Street?"

[Crossposted from JStreetJive.]

1 Comment

Schakowsky was screaming that the Arizona immigration law "was like Nazi Germany with the call to show us your papers." For that stupidity alone, she needs to be replaced. Good luck, Joel!

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