Posted on 05/16/2003 1:35:23 PM PDT by nycfree
Benjamin Undeterred by Incumbent Competition By Peter Savodnik
(view the article at www.thehill.com)
The Hill - "The Newspaper for and about the U.S. Congress"
Michael Benjamin has all the makings of a first-rate Senate candidate.
The New York Republican is sharp, aggressive and perfectly at home talking tax cuts, welfare reform or judicial nominees. He speaks Spanish (good for reaching out to Latinos), hes spent years combating domestic violence (should help with women), and he says the voters hes met like him.
The only obstacle facing the 33-year-old Wall Street equities trader is his opponent, Democratic Sen. Charles Schumer.
With $15 million in the bank and Democrats far outnumbering Republicans in the Empire State, Schumer should be nearly impossible to beat as GOP Rep. Peter Kings decision last month not to seek the seat indicates.
Whats more, the National Republican Senatorial Committee, pinning its hopes for picking up two or three seats on the South, is unlikely to spend much on a race it hardly hopes to win.
None of that seems to have deterred Benjamin, who ran unsuccessfully against Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y) in 1996 and calls himself a center-right Republican, closer to George W. Bush than to ex-New York Sen. Jacob Javits.
I believe that on many issues I represent more of the mainstream and that Senator Schumer represents an insane and irrational position on many important issues such as welfare reform, campaign finance, taxes, abortion, Second Amendment rights you name it, Benjamin said in a recent interview.
Ive traveled to most counties in New York, and I am warmly received in the places I go. I think people are viewing me as a breath of fresh air.
That may be true, but for now Benjamin will have a tough time getting his message out: In the first quarter of 2003, his campaign raised less than $5,000. Benjamin said that since the beginning of April his campaign has raised in the low six figures.
He also pointed out that Republicans can win statewide in New York witness Gov. George Pataki, Javits, and former Sen. Al DAmato, whom Schumer beat in 1998. (DAmato spent more than $24 million on the race.)
Plus, said Benjamin, he brings rich life experiences to the table that will help him overcome any Republican primary foes so far, there are none and, possibly, Schumer.
Benjamin, a 1992 graduate of New York University, said that he grew up spending summers and winters in Queens and the rest of the year somewhere in Latin America Mexico, Peru, Columbia, Ecuador and elsewhere, where his father worked for Bank of America.
He said that since Sept. 11, 2001, voters in New York and across the country expect leaders to be bolder when it comes to national security.
I dont think theres anything wrong with, you know, observing the fact that September 11 has changed the political landscape, said Benjamin, who recalled emerging from the Fulton Street subway station, a few blocks from where the World Trade Center once stood, just after the second plane hit.
I believe this post-9-11 world basically represents an entirely new era, he said. Whereas America kind of felt we could rely on the security of two vast oceans and our allies to ensure our safety, I dont think we can afford that anymore. We have to be on guard against terrorists, tyrants.
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