Obama Confidante May Be Next Presidents Conference Chair
December 18, 2008 Ron Kampeas
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
Washington
One of Barack Obama's earliest Jewish backers is emerging as a front-runner to lead the U.S. Jewish community's foreign-policy umbrella -- the latest sign of efforts to strengthen ties with the president-elect and the incoming administration.
Multiple sources confirmed that Alan Solow, a prominent Chicago-area bankruptcy lawyer who also chairs the national Jewish Community Centers of America, was in contention to replace June Walker, the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations chairwoman, who died in June.
Harold Tanner, a former Presidents Conference chair, has been serving in an interim capacity, but is not interested in another stint.
Solow, who declined to comment, is the natural front-runner, the sources said, in no small part because of his closeness to Obama. Solow has backed Obama since he first ran for the Illinois state Senate in 1996.
Four years ago, when Obama was running for the U.S. Senate and had emerged as a natural leader after his speech to the Democratic National Convention, Solow said that he saw in Obama the qualities of the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. He specified Obama's ability to reach across ethnic divides.
"He has reached out to the Jewish community, and the Jewish community has reached out to him," Solow said at the time.
Malcolm Hoenlein, executive vice chairman of the Presidents Conference, declined to comment on the selection process. Others known to be seeking the post include Moishe Smith, president of B'nai B'rith International; Stephen Wolnek, president of Mercaz, the Zionist arm of the Conservative movement; and Stanley Chesley, president of the Jewish National Fund.
Solow's selection would help heal what some Democrats and Jewish communal insiders describe as a rift between Obama's team and the Presidents Conference. Relations were never smooth, partly because the conference all but embraced Bush's decision to go to war in Iraq; opposition to that war was Obama's signature foreign policy during his campaign.
Matters worsened at several points during the campaign, notably when Hoenlein was quoted in Israel as worrying that Obama's supporters might want to see the United States adopt less pro-Israel positions -- Hoenlein said that he was misquoted -- and later in September when the Presidents Conference invited Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin to a rally protesting Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's speech to the United Nations.
U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) had already agreed to come, but Democrats were upset that after the decision to bring Palin, the Presidents Conference failed to extend the same invitation to her Democratic counterpart as vice-presidential nominee Joe Biden.
The revelation of Solow's candidacy comes as representatives of a range of Jewish organizations are preparing to meet on Dec. 18, for the first time as a collective with the Obama transition team. Several Jewish groups already have participated in individual meetings with the transition team, including on foreign policy, health care, the environment and hate crimes.
Jewish officials said that the level of outreach was a change from a Bush administration that tended to focus narrowly on two areas in its relations with the Jewish community: Israel and faith-based initiatives.
"They are reaching out to the Jewish community, and not just in one meeting," said Hadar Susskind, the Washington director of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs. "We are being included in the meetings on hunger, on hate crimes, on the environment, on faith based -- it's important because it shows that they are taking the Jewish community very seriously in terms of our policy work, they are not just saying 'let's talk about Israel.' "
How to Contain the Iranian Bomb
Foreign-policy issues expected to be featured on the agenda include how the Obama team plans to contain the Iranian nuclear threat, Obama's position on the Bush administration's late push for Palestinian statehood and whether, as president, Obama would encourage the Israeli-Syrian peace track.
On domestic policy, Jewish officials said that they were less likely to focus on Obama's grand proposals of universal health care and public works, and more on emergency measures aimed at addressing the current fiscal crisis, including gaps in funding for Medicare and Medicaid, the entitlement programs that subsidize health care, respectively, for the elderly and the poor.