washington | Having prevailed in a tight re-election contest, President Bush can forever put behind him questions about his mandate: He will use his clear majority of the popular vote and the increased Republican strength in both houses of Congress to effect dramatic change at home and abroad.

Just don’t expect change in Israel.

The intractability of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, coupled with Bush’s sincere sympathy for the Jewish state, suggest that the president will not use his second term to pressure Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon into peace talks with an unreformed Palestinian Authority.

“I don’t see any shift in Bush’s policy or his attitude toward the Israeli-Palestinian situation,” said Jack Rosen, president of the American Jewish Congress and a friend of Bush.

Some Americans had feared — or hoped, depending on their political outlook — that a Bush freed of concerns about re-election would get tough on Israel.

“There were those in my community that would wink and say a second-term president who is free from pressure” would press Israel to stem settlement expansion, among other things, said James Zogby, president of the Arab American Institute. “But I don’t think this government did what it did for electoral reasons. It’s an ideological administration, and its ideology hasn’t changed.”

Bush’s black-and-white worldview makes a shift on Middle East policy unlikely, agreed David Harris, executive director of the American Jewish Committee.

“He’s driven very much by his own moral code of what’s right and wrong, and that will determine his policy,” Harris said.

“He has a strong sense of those nations that are friends and those nations that are foes, and that won’t change because of voting patterns on Nov. 2.”

Instead, look for bold shifts in domestic and social policy — and an even more assertive American posture abroad.

Hannah Rosenthal, executive director of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, the umbrella body for local Jewish community relations councils, said the Republican retention of the White House and both houses of Congress creates dangers for the Jewish community.

“With the branches of government all appearing to be Republican, I think many of our domestic issues, how we fund programs, are in big trouble,” she said.

Congressional Republicans reportedly already are discussing more tax cuts, and Rosenthal said funding for Medicaid — a centerpiece of Jewish community assistance to the impoverished elderly — topped her list of concerns.

With as many as 55 seats in the Senate — an increase of four — Republicans will be better positioned to pressure Democrats into at least reducing their use of the filibuster, the Senate maneuver that allows a party to block Senate action. A filibuster can be broken with the vote of 60 senators.

Democrats have used the filibuster to block Bush appointments to the judiciary considered to be extreme right.

With a 5-4 split on the U.S. Supreme Court against the liberal social issues most Jews favor — reproductive rights, church-state separation and gay rights — Jews anxiously are watching the health of the oldest liberal judge, 84-year-old John Paul Stevens.

“As a woman, as a Jew, as a mother of two daughters, I am very concerned where the Supreme Court will be, how it will protect my rights as a woman, the important separation of religion and government,” Rosenthal said.

Rosen, who is close to the congressional Democratic leadership — and who was mourning the defeat Tuesday, Nov. 2, of an old friend, Minority Leader Sen. Tom Daschle (D-S.D.) — said such concerns were valid, but not as pressing as some might think.

“As for the domestic agenda, I know it seems that the Republicans have increased their numbers in the Senate, but if there are any dramatic attempts to change some of the domestic policy issues, the Democrats still have enough strength to pull that back,” said Rosen, whose organization, the AJCongress has been in the forefront of battles to maintain a high wall between church and state.

“The president and the country are engaged in a war against terrorism, a war in Iraq, a lot of priorities internationally that I think will engage the Bush administration for the next several years and probably not enable them to get too proactive on the domestic agenda.”

ELECTION 2004:
THE JEWISH VOTE

Bush gets 24 percent of Jewish vote — less than GOP hoped for

Israelis prefer Bush: ‘He knows what terrorism is’

Congress says goodbye to two Jews, hello to two new Jewish women

Some Jewish groups fear GOP gains could hamper domestic agendas

Time to unite our country

Jewish legislators in the 109th Congress

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Ron Kampeas is the D.C. bureau chief at the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.