Szeliga: Chris Van Hollen can not be counted on to support Israel

Delegate Kathy Szeliga and her Democratic opponent, Congressman Chris Van Hollen, are running in Maryland's hotly contested Senate race to claim the seat being vacated by the longtime serving Senator Barbara Mikulski who has held the title of Maryland's Senator for 30 years.

In an exclusive interview with the BaltimoreJewishLife.com, Szeliga recently spoke about her support for Israel.  Delegate Szeliga believes that too many elected officials  take Israel for granted and can not be counted on to support Israel. "I will never be that person, " she emphatically  tells me.  The Republican nominee for U.S. Senate also made it clear to me that the welfare of the State of Israel is a top priority for her and will be on her mind every day as Maryland's Senator.  Mrs. Szeliga, a self described strong supporter of Israel, says that she will always support Israel in the U.S. Senate "by constantly remembering and keeping in the forefront that Israel is our number one ally in the Middle East  and one of our top allies around the world."  "They [Israel] are the only stable and friendly democracy in one of the most volatile regions in the world and they need our continued support," Szeliga reiterates.

The Minority Whip in the Maryland House of Delegates is certainly not a newcomer to Israel advocacy. A few years ago, there was a group  in Maryland that absurdly called for an academic boycott of Israeli  educational institutions. Lobbyists for the Maryland Jewish Alliance reached out to Delegate Szeliga  for help to make sure that no taxpayer dollars were being used to fund this BDS organization. Szeliga, who was then a member of the Appropriations Committee, notes that the Maryland Jewish Alliance specifically contacted her because they knew she was  a strong supporter of Israel.  She cites her involvement in preventing this anti-Israel organization from gaining taxpayer support as proof that the Jewish community trusts her to support Israel.

But what ultimately propelled Delegate Szeliga to enter the  Senate race was her passionate opposition to what she describes  in a  May 17 facebook post as the "backroom deal the Obama Administration struck with Iran."  In her interview with the Baltimore Jewish Life, she questions how the Obama Administration could negotiate with a country that has proclaimed its annihilatory intentions towards Israel and in March of this year launched ballistic missiles with the phrase 'Israel must be wiped out' in Hebrew. "I  just am so troubled by the fact that a 100 billion dollars has been released to a nation that is the world's leading state sponsor of terrorism and a gross violator of human rights," laments Szeliga.  She is also of the opinion shared by many in the pro-Israel community that the Iran deal lacks the necessary deterrents to determine whether Iran is violating the agreement and acquiring nuclear weapons. "The inspections and the accountability measures that were put in that deal are severely inadequate," Szeliga says.

Szeliga is wasting no time  to highlight  the fact that her opponent Chris Van Hollen was not on the side  of pro-Israel voters when he sided with the Obama Administration and voted in favor of the Iran Deal. "I could not have been more disappointed with the fact that both Democratic candidates, regardless of which one won, Israel would not have a strong supporter and someone that they knew they could count on in the U.S. Senate," says Mrs. Szeliga in explaining why she jumped into the race  to oppose the Democrat nominee despite the odds of a Republican winning in blue state Maryland. Van Hollen's support for the Iran deal demonstrates, according to Szeliga, that following the party line  is more important to the Congressman representing the 8th District than the security of both  the U.S. and Israel.

I ask Delegate Szeliga, "what does Chris Van Hollen's support for the Iran deal tell you about his judgment?"  She answers my question by responding confidently that it tells you he used poor judgment and has a serious case of naivete in endorsing a deal that puts Americans, Israelis and the entire world in significant danger.

Because Congressman Van Hollen continues to support the Iran deal, Szeliga tells me that she does not understand how Van Hollen can portray himself as moderate.  "I do not know how anybody can look at the Iran deal and say supporting that makes you a moderate," Szeliga says of Van Hollen's professed moderate beliefs. 

Szeliga fully expects that Van Hollen would "stand with his party every time" should he be elected Senator.

If voters are wondering how Kathy Szeliga would conduct herself in the U.S. Senate, Szeliga  concludes the interview by offering a glimpse into how she would make decisions.  "I have a record of being an independent thinker," Szeliga says of herself clearly signifying that she would oppose her own party if she felt it was in the  best interest of Maryland and the country. 

 Mikulski's replacement  will be elected on November 8, 2016.

Brad E. Kauffman is an attorney and freelance writer covering politics                 

Kathy Szeliga can be contacted through her  website at www.kathyformaryland.com.