MAP OR TRAP?
Israels minister of tourism launched a round of stops in the United States last week and made it clear he had no room in his itinerary for President Bushs road map for peace.
With Prime Minister Ariel Sharon under pressure to accept American mediation leading by stages to a Palestianian state, I can be the bad guy, said Benny Elon, who insisted, . The road map is a road trap. Elon confided his opposition to the plan to a small group of clerics, religious conservatives, and media people after addressing a larger group at the Mid-America Baptist Theological Seminary.
Elon, who acceded to the tourism ministry last year after the assassination of his predecessor, presumably by Palestinian terrorists, told both the larger and the smaller assemblies that the challenge, for both Israelis and the countrys sympathizers among American Jews and Christians, was not to forget who gave us the power to inhabit contested territories in the historic Holy Land.
We are not going to agree to let down our borders, to be without a state, just to have sympathy, Elon said. Brandishing a Bible, he told the assembly in the Seminary auditorium, This is behind the conflict — not politics. He said there was no difference between anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism and likened the supportive evangelicals in his audience to Christian Zionists.
Elon said that complications ranging from the ongoing second Intifadah in Palestine to the after-effects of the September 11th attacks in this country had cut tourism to Israel to almost a third of its former volume but that visits to his country were back on the upswing, and he assured his hosts that they would have absolute safety as visitors to Israel.
One of Elons hosts, Religious Roundtable leader Ed McAteer, announced that his group was paying for several billboards in the Memphis area and elsewhere, all urging President Bush to support Israels claim to the Holy Land on Biblical grounds.
Elon, who was scheduled to visit several major American cities during his visit, was welcomed to Memphis by Shelby County Commissioner Marilyn Loeffel and city councilman Rickey Peete.
¥ Ordinarily, August would have been the lull before the storm, politically, but — well, we had the storm first this year, didnt we? Then the lull.
In any case, local campaigns have struggled of late even to be blips on the radar screen. During the immediate aftermath of the storm, some campaigns even had to discontinue telephone polling because of the negative vibes they were getting to the process.
All that is about to change. With two months to go, door-to-door operations are back underway, ad campaigns are about to be sprung upon us, and the first fliers should be clogging the mailboxes of potential voters. Among recent developments:
Two District 5 city council contenders busied themselves with headquarters openings, while a third decided to marshal his resources elsewhere.
State representative Carol Chumney braved the torrid heat to open her headquarters at the Chickasaw Crossing shopping center on Poplar Saturday, with such eminences as Marguerite Piazza and Bob James on hand to lend support. Opponent George Flinn, the physician/broadcast magnate who has the local Republican endorsement, will be holding his hq opening this Saturday from 11 to 1 at Park Place Mall.
Lawyer Jim Strickland, on the other hand, has decided to do without a headquarters and focus instead on electronic advertising and direct mail. Strickland, who began his campaign with a goal of raising $100,000, says he now has $91,000 on hand.
The race for city court clerk has sailed into its first major controversy, with incumbent Thomas Long angrily denying allegations from the campaign of challenger Janis Fullilove that he is a Republican. Long cited a long string of involvements in major Democratic campaigns in an appearance recently before the Shelby County Democratic Women.
A third contender in the clerks race, Betty Boyette, hopes to benefit from the internecine warfare of Long and Fullilove.
The Long-Fullilove contest, like that between Democrats Strickland and Chumney, has local Democrats moving in different directions. The party executive committee, which was evenly divided in last springs chairmanship race between state representative Kathryn Bowers, the eventual winner, and former chairman Gale Jones Carson, reflected the same split in this months key vote on whether to follow the Republicans lead and endorse candidates in city-election races.
The committee voted 20-16 against endorsements, with the Bowers faction once again in the ascendancy.
¥ Sometime Memphian Chip Saltzman, who logged time as an aide to both former Governor Don Sundquist and U.S. Senator Bill Frist and was state GOP chairman during the 2000 campaign year, held his annual Young Guns retreat this past weekend on the Ocoee River in Polk County.
Some 45 sub-40-year-old Republicans from across the state were invited for the weekend — including Memphians Kemp Conrad, the current Shelby County Republican chairman, and David Kustoff, who held that position during the middle 90s and ran the Bush campaign in Tennessee three years ago.
Speaker for the event was former 4th District congressman Van Hilleary, the GOPs unsuccessful candidate for the governorship in 2092. Hilleary is a potential candidate for either governor of senator in 2006.