Today’s Democratic primary in New Jersey’s Ninth Congressional
District — which, due to redistricting, is a contest between two
incumbent congressmen, Steve Rothman and Bill Pascrell — has
developed into an ugly fight over Israel. Pascrell has courted the
local Arab and Muslim community, and Rothman, who is Jewish, has
faced attacks over his support for the US-Israeli alliance — and
they haven’t been confined to policy disagreements, but have
included shrill charges of dual loyalty, a staple of anti-Semitic
discourse. From a disturbing report on the
race by the Washington Free Beacon’s Adam Kredo:
“One side says, ‘We want this Jew out of office’ and, frankly,
it’s pretty unsettling,” Ben Chouake, president of NORPAC, a
pro-Israel political action committee based in Englewood Cliffs,
told the Free Beacon. “They emphasized [Rothman] is a
Jewish congressman.”
It gets worse. Some of the people and institutions that Pascrell
has cozied up to are rather sinister:
Pascrell also has embraced Imam Mohammad Qatanani, a
controversial Passaic spiritual leader who stands
accused by the State Department of hiding a conviction in
Israel for having ties to the terror group Hamas.
In a
post at Powerline, Joel Mowbray digs deeper into this,
examining Pascrell’s “troubling associations with Muslim figures
who have espoused fiery anti-Israel rhetoric and turned a blind eye
to Hamas sympathizers.” The whole thing is worth reading.
(Ironically, the one blemish on Rothman’s pro-Israel record —
his support for Barack Obama — has added another wrinkle to the
race: Bill Clinton has campaigned for Pascrell, who supported
Hillary Clinton in 2008. President Obama, in an unusual move for a
race between two sitting Democrats, has endorsed Rothman.)
The local Orthodox Jewish community, meanwhile, has rallied to
Rothman, with leaders of 15 Orthodox synagogues
urging their heavily Republican congregants to switch
registration for this race. Will it be enough? We’ll find out
tonight. Polls close at 8 PM Eastern.