The last time Jerry Nadler faced a serious threat to his congressional seat, Bill Clinton had never met Monica Lewinsky, Newt Gingrich had not yet been voted speaker of the House, Kurt Cobain had just died and Justin Bieber had just been born.

But now, after more than two decades as the largely-uncontested representative-for-life of a congressional district stretching from Manhattan’s West Side to Brooklyn’s Boro Park, one of the most powerful Jews in New York City politics appears to face a political fight on the horizon.

Nadler represents an estimated 270,000 Jewish New Yorkers in Congress, according to estimates revised last year by the Berman Jewish DataBank — 100,000 more Jews than anyone else in the House. Thus, his decision in late August to support the framework agreement for a nuclear deal with Iran was an acute blow to the swath of Jewish communal heavy-hitters battling against the deal, including the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and the American Jewish Committee — not to mention the Israeli government.

Nadler bucked them all. And some opponents have lashed out.

An anonymous advertisement in the September 3 issue of the Flatbush Jewish Journal, an Orthodox newspaper, splashed the headline “How...read more at Forward