
PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
17, No. 16 |
July
29 - Aug 25, 2004 |



Engel and Challenger McAdams Trade
Charges
By HEATHER HADDON
An unusually lively local
race for Congress in the 17th District is getting livelier as
incumbent Eliot Engel and challenger Kevin McAdams exchange jabs.
While McAdams charged that his opponent has grown lax and out of touch,
Engel
characterized his opponent as a political opportunist.
"He's 32 and believes in starting at the top," said Engel, 57.
"Every two years I have primary races against elected officials or
community activists . . . but he is neither." While still a
political newcomer, McAdams is running a spirited, visible campaign,
building on his connections as a firefighter and former union leader. He
netted roughly 5,600 petition signatures, well above the required 1,500.
Engel, who collected 8,000 of his own, obviously takes the race seriously.
Since redistricting two years ago, the district includes large sections of
Rockland County and Westchester, where McAdams is from. But Engel is
confident his constituents will reelect him.
"They know I'm a hands-on congressman," said Engel. "When
you look at my record, it really reflects the wishes of the
district."
Engel emphasized that his voting record consistently garners high scores
from labor, environmental, and other interest groups. He also highlighted
his work on the international front, including stands on Ireland, Vieques,
and Israel.
"There's no stronger supporter [of Israel] in Congress than me,"
said Engel, who is
Jewish.
Engel is particularly proud of authoring a bill that cracks down on
terrorism against Israel sponsored by Syria. The law, passed last winter,
imposes U.S. sanctions on Syria.
"I literally forced Bush to sign the bill," Engel said.
"That shows my effectiveness in a Republican-controlled Congress."
But McAdams charges that the bill is the only piece of legislation that
Engel has successfully enacted. "Anybody can co-author a bill,"
McAdams said. "This is the only one he's actually finished the job
on."
Engel said McAdams' jab reflects his political inexperience. "The way
that Congress works is that there are not only free-standing pieces, but
larger omnibus bills," he said. Engel said that just last week he
successfully added language to a larger bill about safeguarding Indian
Point, and lobbied the Senate to adopt it.
"I can provide you with lists and lists of the [bills] that I've done
over the years," Engel said. "He needs to be careful before coming
up with things that aren't true."
As for the criticism that he fails to spend enough time in his district,
Engel said that he meets with eight to 10 local groups on an average
weekend. He challenged McAdams to substantiate his own community
involvement. "Where has he been all these years? Where does he stand on
the filtration plant?" Engel asked.
McAdams was vague on that question. Though, as a Yonkers resident, he is
concerned about the plant's impact, McAdams also thought it could create
jobs. "I need to look at it more closely," he said.
Regardless, McAdams defended his record of community involvement.
"I've spent eight years as a firefighter, running into burning
buildings in the Bronx and Manhattan," he said. "My entire life
has been spent serving my community."
Engel also criticized McAdams for being a Republican until 2003.
"People don't like party switchers," Engel said. "He should
have the guts to run against me as a Republican." McAdams says he has
voted for Democ18ratic presidential candidates, and is politically
progressive.
He is strongly opposed to the war in Iraq. "When we as a country are
focused on going to war . . . then we are not focused on the
home front," McAdams said. Engel voted for the war, but now he says the
Bush administration has "bungled" it. "When I voted for the
resolution, I thought it would have been handled better," Engel said.
McAdams was on the defensive after the Daily News reported that about
$30,000 of his campaign funds came from investment firms that have a
relationship with the Uniformed Firefighters Association's pension fund,
which he helped to handle as a trustee of the fund. "I think, frankly,
that there is some kind of criminal act there," Engel said.
McAdams brushed off that charge, saying that he was one of 12 Board members
making decisions for the fund. "Any individual is allowed to contribute
to a campaign," h he said.
McAdams still lags in fund-raising, banking roughly half as much as Engel,
who had about $700,000 in his war chest as of last month. But he continues
to win local union endorsements, the most recent from the city Sergeants
Benevolent Association. Much of Engel's support comes from state and
national unions, like the New York AFL-CIO.
Though he is fighting an uphill battle, McAdams genuinely seems to be
enjoying himself. "I'm thinking about writing a book about it," he
said of the campaign. Asked what his topic would be, he said, "the
power of incumbency, and how to work a campaign from the ground
up."
Ed. note: The Norwood News profiled Kevin McAdams in its
previous issue. It can be found on our Web site.
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