Cuomo Does Israel — And Buffalo Too!

The “harmlessness” of routine pandering evaporates when politicians try to ingratiate themselves not just with an innocent ethnic group, but the unthinking supporters of a criminal state.

Cuomo in Israel: assiduously comforting the powerful.

Cuomo in Israel: assiduously comforting the powerful.

By Murray Polner

When he was running for the governorship of New York in the Fifties and Sixties, Nelson Rockefeller was often shepherded by his Republican Jewish Attorney General Louis Lefkowitz through  the streets of the city’s famous Lower East  Side wearing a yarmulke and eating knishes. The multi-millionaire heir of a mega-mega multi-millionaire fortune was out hunting for Jewish votes and no-one even raised a cynical eye because that’s what politicians did. Until Fiorello LaGuardia came along, the city, after all, had Tammany Hall trading gifts and goodies for votes and access to the municipal treasury.  It’s what politicians have always done, a guiding principle of election campaigns. Visits to Italy and Ireland were normal. Skeptics may call it pandering but it’s always been smart politics and pretty mild compared to today’s vicious attack ads and constant flow of money.

So it was hardly surprising that Gov. Andrew Cuomo would suddenly decide to depart Albany for Jerusalem just as the gory war in Gaza was coming to an end. Some 1900 Palestinian civilians and sixty-four Israelis were killed and more grievously wounded.  But up for re-election in November when he will probably win big, he may have been mindful how diverting it would be, and of course helpful with Jewish voters  to escape a squalid state legislature with its aura of endemic corruption.  And while he has been generally regarded as a competent governor, there is, however, a U.S. Attorney wondering why he abruptly abandoned a crime commission  with subpoena power he had  once organized and then suddenly locked down.  The Wall Street Journal reported that investigators “are examining whether New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo or his staff directed an anti-corruption commission to not refer cases to district attorneys for prosecution.” The newspaper added that the commission had “turned up evidence of “potential criminal wrongdoing of six to 12 lawmakers,” more than likely from his own Democratic party. And maybe, just maybe, during his whirlwind twenty-nine hour meeting and greeting Israeli leaders (while ignoring Palestinians who invited him to come and visit them too) he allowed himself to dream how presidential this all might look one day, especially should Hillary stumble.

My congressman, Stephen Israel, arrived separately with nine members of the House on a tour formed by a group said to be affiliated with AIPAC, the Israel Lobby. Later, he said that several other members of Congress sent him messages “asking how they can get over here.” 

Not every Israeli agrees. “The trouble with war is that it has two sides,” wrote Uri Avnery,  the respected (at least among Israeli peaceniks) 90-year-old journalist, publisher,  wounded war veteran and onetime member of the Knesset. “Everything would be so much easier if war had only one side. Ours, of course.”  Of course it may be that Cuomo was not really pandering but expressing a deeply felt personal support for Israel, the most powerful nation in the Middle East. But what his trip also does is illuminate what the prescient late Zionist scholar Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg wrote in 1990, when he detected a growing trend among American Jews which is still true today and was re-emphasized most recently by the Gaza war: “There is an organized and aging half moving right and a younger, more liberal group increasingly abandoning Jewish organizations.”  

But Albany still beckons. Back in January 2014 Cuomo announced that the state would grant the owners of the NFL Buffalo Bills $60 million to pay for stadium renovations, which led one New York citizen  and Cuomo critic to send a letter to the Great Neck News asking  readers  to decide if Cuomo “is attempting to buy votes in an election year with taxpayer’s dollars.” 

But that’s the perennial  name of the game regarding Israel as well as Buffalo and everywhere else. Come November, Cuomo will certainly win over Jewish voters and Buffalo fans.  It’s not pandering. It’s just shameless everyday politics.  

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Murray Polner wrote “Peace Justice & Jews”and  “No Victory Parades: The Return of the Vietnam Veteran,”  co-authored a biography of the Berrigan brothers, and most recently, “We Who Dared Say No To War.”