April 1990, Page 14
1990 Election Watch
Congress's Sugardaddy
By Parker L. Payson
In 1985 a group of British parliamentarians visited Congress. Behind
closed doors, they expressed their confusion over US Middle East
policy: Why was the US seemingly intent on maintaining bad relations
with 21 Arab nations by fervently supporting Israel? Then-House
Majority Leader Tom Foley (D-WA) explained that Congressional leaders
had little choice, for any criticism of Israel would unleash a political
windstorm capable of sweeping any national politician out of office.
Since then the windstorm has whipped itself into a tornado. Pro-Israel
political action committees (PACs), which raised over $30 million
for federal elections from 1978 to 1988, raised over $6 million
in 1989 alone.
PAC contributions are instrumental in maintaining
a permanent Congress.
Weeks after the members of the 101st Congress took their seats
in January 1989, the pro-Israel community was hard at work tipping
chairs. By year's end, 54 pro-Israel PACs had spent $1.4 million
on 173 candidates for the 1990 elections, contributing over $36,000
to 20 senatorial candidates running for re-election in 1992 and
1994.
The ability of these PACs to raise tremendous amounts of money
a year and a half before the elections demonstrates their organizational
strength. It also magnifies their political clout, making them the
premiere special interest group on Capitol Hill, or, in the words
of former House Speaker Tip O'Neill, "as effective an operation
as there is in Washington."
Early donations to friendly incumbents help build war chests so
huge that opponents are discouraged from running at all.
Two of the top 10 pro-Israel PAC recipients in the Senate, Joseph
Biden (D-DE) and Jay Rockefeller (D-WV), are currently running unopposed.
In 1989, over 95 percent of all pro-Israel PAC money went to incumbents.
Contributions from pro-Israel PACs, as well as PACs representing
other special interests, are instrumental in maintaining a permanent
Congress which, in 1988, faced only a two percent turnover.
Pro-Israel PACs generally support incumbents with a proven record
of support over challengers with the same commitment. This is bad
news for Representative Bill Shuette (R-MI), who has earned a strong
rating in the pro-Israel community. This year he is seeking the
seat of longtime Israel supporter Carl Levin (D-MI), a senior member
of the Armed Services Committee and drafter of a stinging letter
to Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole (R-KS) opposing any foreign aid
cuts to Israel.
"Levin's ties to the PAC community could help him in terms
of fundraising," Shuette acknowledged to the Washington
Report. "But I have a close working relationship and strong
base of support within the Jewish community." Shuette's kowtow,
however, is not enough for pro-Israel PACs. They have already given
$116,000 to Levin.
Pro-Israel PACs' support for incumbents is equally upsetting to
Representative Claudine Schneider (R-RI) who is seeking to defeat
a 30-year veteran of the Senate, Foreign Relations Chairman Claiborne
Pell (D-RI) in a race which the Washington Post calls "a
contest of gender, generation and style." Both are supporters
of a strong Israel. Pell, however, was one of eight senators up
for re-election who refused to sign a 1989 letter urging the State
Department to deny PLO leader Yasser Arafat a visa to attend a session
of the United Nations. Nevertheless, the pro-Israel community has
stood behind 71 year-old Pell, contributing $21,000 compared to
Schneider's $1,000. Schneider's campaign spokesperson, Ellen Conoway,
told the Washington Report that, if time permits, Schneider
will visit Israel to strengthen her support within the pro-Israel
community, and called pro-Israel PACs' support for Pell "damn
frustrating" because "Representative Schneider has a better
record on Israel, while Pell has been wishy-washy."
Pro-Israel PACs have strongly supported other members of the Senate
Foreign Affairs Committee, including outspoken champion of Israel
Paul Simon (D-IL), who has received $104,351, and Senator Rudy Boschwitz
(R-MN), who has called cuts to Israel "neither logical, correct
or necessary." Boschwitz, as a member of the Foreign Relations
Committee as well as the Europe and Middle East Subcommittee, has
received $74,500.
Senate Foreign Relations Committee member Mitch McConnell (R-KY)
faces a tough re-election battle against Louisville Judge Harvey
Sloane. McConnell, who proposed campaign reform legislation which
would outlaw all PACs except non-connected ones, such as pro-Israel
PACs, not surprisingly received $59,000 from pro-Israel PACs in
1989.
The Israel lobby has lavished $108,500 on Sen. Bob Harkin (D-IA),
who sits on the Appropriations Committee and its Defense and Foreign
Operations Subcommittees, for his race against Representative Jim
Tauke (R-IA). According to the Detroit Jewish News, analysts
are concerned about the race because "Harkin, a good friend
with a solid record, now is on two key subcommittee panels,"
while "Tauke has a mixed to poor record of support for Israel."
Pro-Israel PAC support for incumbents is so pervasive that Senator
Howell Heflin (D-AL), chairman of the Ethics Committee, has received
an astonishing $83,500 even though he does not sit on any committees
directly affecting Israel. Heflin's opponent, Alabama State Senator
Bill Cabaniss, told the Washington Report that he questioned
the general propriety of Heflin's accepting such large amounts of
special interest funding, saying:
Howell Heflin is a perfect example of an entrenched incumbent and
the problems and trappings associated with that incumbency. For
many, many people there's just too cozy a relationship between special
interests and these incumbents. A great many people in Alabama are
watching how Heflin handles his role as Chairman of the Ethics Committee
to see if this relationship has become so tight that it is impossible
for the Senate to reprimand other members such as the Keating Five.
In the House of Representatives, donation patterns are similar.
Pro-Israel PACs have focused their contributions on incumbents in
influential foreign policy positions. The five top recipients of
pro-Israel PAC dollars in 1989 (all of whom currently are unopposed)
were: Ron Wyden (D-OR), a member of the Arms Control and Foreign
Policy Caucus; Les Aspin (D-WI), Chairman of the Armed Services
Committee, which oversees US defenses abroad; Sam Gejdenson (D-CT)
of the Foreign Affairs Committee, who has consistently opposed arms
sales to Arab nations; David Obey (D-WI), Chairman of the Foreign
Operations, Export Financing and Related Programs Subcommittee of
the Appropriations Committee, who recently sponsored legislation
withholding contributions to the United Nations for recognizing
the PLO; Benjamin Gilman (R-NY), the Ranking Minority member of
the Foreign Affairs Committee's Subcommittee on Europe and the Middle
East, who wrote what he called a "strongly-worded letter to
President Bush" opposing US aid cuts to Israel.
As pro-Israel PAC money continues to increase, the number of people
who believe that PAC contributions disenfranchise the voters continues
to grow. According to a March poll, 71 percent of American voters
are in favor of severe restrictions on PACs, while 58 percent want
to ban private campaign contributions and support public congressional
campaign financing, the highest such figure since Watergate.
"The public has come to believe that Congress no longer represents
the people that elect them, but those who contribute big money to
their campaigns," says Joan Claybrook, president of the watchdog
group Public Citizen. "And they are fed up."
Parker L. Payson is the elections editor for the Washington
Report on Middle East Affairs. |