WASHINGTON, 16 July — After the brutal Democratic runoff for
a House seat in Alabama, blacks, Jews, and Muslim Americans are
preparing themselves for another fight over the August primary
involving Georgia Democrat Cynthia McKinney.
The Georgia race is being run on a parallel track of the
Alabama runoff, where attorney Artur Davis drew national Jewish
support in his successful effort to unseat incumbent Rep. Earl
Hilliard, who was viewed as too even-handed in Middle East
politics.
The Israeli lobby scored its biggest history in years with
Hilliard’s defeat. Hilliard, a five-term incumbent, a civil
rights era campaigner and Alabama’s first black congressman
since Reconstruction, was defeated by a flood of pro-Israel money
sent to his opponent. Official word has it that 80 percent of
Davis’ campaign funding — almost one million dollars, arrived
just in the nick of time — from New York City.
Jewish donors have already begun funding McKinney’s
challenger Denise Majette, a former state court judge from Atlanta
who maintains a fervent pro-Israel position.
As one of Capitol Hill’s greatest supporters of the
Palestinians, McKinney has become the target of pro-Israeli Jews
and conservative non-Jews alike.
Although some moderate pro-Israelis are worried about the bad
blood with black politicians already caused by Hilliard’s
defeat, and are suggesting that the lobby refuse the opportunity
to go after McKinney, many in the Jewish community are said to be
intoxicated with Hilliard’s defeat, and are now focused on
taking down McKinney.
Realizing the danger, McKinney’s staffers have been taking a
very low profile on anything to do with the Middle East.
Even more thoughtful pro-Israelis in town are said to be
privately worried about the effect McKinney’s possible defeat
will have on relations between Jews and blacks — often regarded
as the cornerstones of the Democratic Party.
They also have expressed concern about the mobilization of the
pro-Arab and Muslim resources sent to Hilliard, even if it was too
late.
Indeed, Arab and Muslim American organizations are already
soliciting their members to show their support by donating to
McKinney’s re-election campaign.
“Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney (D-4th, Georgia), who is
arguably the strongest supporter of issues of concern to the
American Muslim community, urgently needs our help to win
re-election,” writes the Council on American-Muslim Relations,
CAIR, in an urgent notice to its members.
“She has consistently and unflinchingly supported a balanced
US foreign policy in the Middle East and has opposed lopsided
bills that harm the interests of America, Israel and the Muslim
world. She is a strong defender of civil liberties of all
Americans and is known throughout the world as the voice of the
voiceless — the champion of human rights. She has condemned
racial profiling of any and all Americans and has consistently
spoken out against the Secret Evidence Act and other legislative
measures which seek to discriminate against certain racial
minorities in this country,” says CAIR.
“If we really want to help the people of the Middle East
reach peace, then we need to stand up for Cynthia now and help
defend her against this type of political assault.”
“Hilliard was a lesson for us to grow on,” said Abdurrahman
Alamoudi, former executive director of the American Muslim Council
and current president of the American Muslim Foundation. “We
just started late with Hilliard.”
McKinney’s main “problems” started last summer when she
said the Bush administration’s decision to pull out of the
Durban racism conference was a “travesty.”
Last October, after New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani returned a
$10 million gift to the city from Saudi Prince Alwaleed ibn Talal
after the prince gently criticized the US policy in the Middle
East, McKinney issued a public letter supporting the prince,
asking that the donate the money to black charities.
Finally, in an April radio interview, McKinney called for an
investigation into whether President Bush might have had prior
knowledge of the Sept. 11 attacks and if he profited from them.