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Washington Post: Democrats' Jersey Barrier
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Home away from home
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Democrats' Jersey Barrier
By Ruth Marcus - Washington Post Wednesday, October 4, 2006; Page A25 JERSEY CITY -- It's 1 in the morning, and Bob Menendez, a red bindi dot on his forehead, is at his third Navratri festival of the night. "Namaste," says the Democratic senator, pressing his palms together and looking out over a street thronged with Indian Americans who've taken a break from the exuberant dancing at the traditional Hindu festival. On this day, Menendez's pitch to keep his Senate seat has taken him on a marathon spin through the ethnic kaleidoscope of New Jersey politics. He dropped by the city's Irish Festival, a backyard barbecue with the Latino community, a meeting with African American leaders and a Korean celebration -- before boarding a bus full of Indian American supporters for this late-night blitz. "I always drive myself hard," he says, but this fall the 52-year-old Menendez has especially good reason to push. In a year when Democrats across the country are doing better than expected, his race could be a glaring counterexample -- and a potentially costly one, given Democrats' outside chance of retaking the Senate. Gov. Jon S. Corzine tapped Menendez, then the House's third-ranking Democrat, to fill his unexpired Senate term. Winning election on his own should have been the easy part -- this reliably blue state hasn't elected a Republican senator for 34 years, and President Bush's popularity is low. But Menendez now finds himself in a too-close-to-call race against Republican Tom Kean Jr., the 38-year-old son of the popular former governor. The scion of a patrician family, Kean is waging a decidedly ungentlemanly campaign against Menendez, the son of poor Cuban immigrants. The race, in broad strokes, comes down to Bush fatigue vs. corruption fatigue. Menendez is doing his best to lash Kean to the president and his policies. Kean hardly mentions Bush or his party, though he's been happy to accept fundraising help from Laura Bush and Karl Rove. Instead, much as Menendez seeks to link Kean to Bush, Kean paints Menendez as "an individual who personifies the system that has hurt New Jersey for so long." In hammering on corruption, Kean may have lucked out -- in his timing and opponent. Even in a state where tales of corrupt officials are as common as turnpike traffic, this has been a busy season. One powerful Democratic state senator was implicated in arranging a no-show state job for himself. The former state Senate president pleaded guilty to taking bribes. The attorney general, a Menendez protege, had to quit after intervening in a traffic stop of her boyfriend. Former governor Jim McGreevey, who resigned after admitting he put his gay lover on the state payroll, has just published a book. And Menendez, who got his start in the notoriously corrupt politics of North Jersey's Hudson County, has offered Kean ample ammunition. Some of the attacks on him have been decidedly below the belt, others overstated even by the loose rules of political license, but some involve the kind of back-scratching coziness that looks even worse in the unforgiving light of a 30-second attack ad. Kean accused Menendez of being "part of a massive kickback scheme" in Union City 25 years ago, citing his 12 appearances before a federal grand jury that culminated in the racketeering conviction of Menendez's political mentor, Mayor William V. Musto. In fact, four former federal prosecutors in the case contradicted Kean's assessment. "[I]t was certainly an act of courage for him to testify against the entire city government," one told the New York Times. Similarly, Kean assails Menendez for "putting $350,000 of federal taxpayer money in his own pocket" -- accusations that arise from Menendez renting a house he owned to a nonprofit agency he helped to get federal funds, even as agency employees donated to his campaigns. Reports from the time indicate that the rental was at market rates; Menendez says the ethics panel approved the arrangement. Still, federal prosecutors have subpoenaed records, and Menendez himself says he wouldn't do it again. Adding to Menendez's woes, last week he had to sever ties with his childhood friend and closest political adviser, Donald Scarinci, after a tape surfaced in which Scarinci urges a Hudson County contractor to make a particular hire. "That would be a favor to the congressman," Scarinci says, adding that "it makes sense for you because it gives you protection." Kean tries to bring home the corruption issue, linking it, not entirely convincingly, to the state's "unaffordability," especially high property taxes -- never mind that local taxes aren't something a U.S. senator can do much about. "That type of personal profiting from public office is what raises people's taxes and makes this state more unaffordable," he says. Politically, Kean is no Lincoln Chafee moderate -- or even a Tom Kean Sr. moderate. He is pro-choice and supports federally funded embryonic stem cell research, but he backs the Bush tax cuts, would have voted for his Supreme Court nominees and the war in Iraq, and denounces Bush's immigration plan as unacceptable "amnesty." Menendez, for his part, seems offended by having to run against the unseasoned Kean in what he describes as "probably the most vile campaign I have ever participated in." Dismissing the closeness of the polls, he says, "New Jersey is a late-deciding state." The open question is what, 34 days from now, its voters will decide they're most fed up with.LINK
Posted on: 2006/10/4 13:44
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