The Jerusalem Post

Religiousl­y observant new chief of staff has deep understand­ing of community’s views

- • By RON KAMPEAS

WASHINGTON (JTA) – The Twitter handle @Jewishwhit­eHouse is back.

US President Barack Obama on Monday announced that Jack Lew, his director of the Office of Budget and Management (OMB) – a Cabinet-level position – would replace William Daley as White House chief of staff.

Lew, 56, was chosen for his long tenure in government and his reputation as a skilled multi-tasker. He was the top budget cruncher for Bill Clinton before reprising the job for Obama.

Obama stressed Lew’s management savvy in announcing the appointmen­t on Monday.

“Jack’s economic advice has been invaluable and he has my complete trust, both because of his mastery of the numbers, and because of the values behind those numbers,” he said.

Jewish officials offered a sigh of relief: Their who-we-gonnacall pleas have been answered.

Since Dennis Ross, Obama’s top advisor on Iran, announced his departure late last year, community officials wondered who was left to call upon in a White House that has hemorrhage­d top Jews over the last year or so.

Lew, an Orthodox Jew, is close to the community and is a go-to person for Jewish events in the capital.

“The reports that there is no one to talk to have always been exaggerate­d,” said Malcolm Hoenlein, the executive vice president of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizati­ons.

Hoenlein pointed to Peter Rouse, a counselor to Obama who has served as acting chief of staff, as someone who has always been accessible. Still, Hoenlein added, “Jack being there will be beneficial, it will foster communicat­ion.”

Obama launched his administra­tion with a strong contingent of Jewish advisers. In addition to Ross, David Axelrod was his top political adviser, Rahm Emanuel was his chief of staff and Daniel Shapiro handled the Levant desk at the National Security Council.

Emanuel quit in late 2010 to run for Chicago mayor; Axelrod left soon after to help run Obama’s re-election campaign, and Shapiro is now in Tel Aviv as ambassador.

That left a perceived gap in the White House – one that Lew will fill, although Jewish officials stressed that they did not expect the attention from a chief of staff that they received from mid-level staffers.

“That’s not the role he’s going to play,” said Abraham Foxman, the national director of the Anti-defamation League, referring to the regular conference calls that Ross and Shapiro had with Jewishcomm­unity leaders. “He will be an adviser to the president on all things and a gatekeeper, but to the extent the president will turn to him for his view, he has an understand­ing of the community and of its views.”

At the same time, Lew has become something of a go-to Obama administra­tion speaker and guest for the organized Jewish community, particular­ly among Orthodox Jews. Most recently, he lit the giant “national menorah” that graces the National Mall and is organized by American Friends of Lubavitch.

“As an American Jew, I can’t think of anyone who has a deeper commitment to the United States, as well as his

JACK LEW with Obama. own Jewish identity at the same time,” said Rabbi Levi Shemtov, who heads the Chabad group and noted that Lew occasional­ly stops by for Shabbat services.

“His appointmen­t obviously gives the White House an envoy to the Jewish community who is eloquent, respected, even beloved across the Jewish spectrum. That’s probably an added bonus rather than the core qualificat­ion,” he added.

Lew interests Jewish audiences, in part, because of how he balances the 24/7 demands of being a top government official with the 24/6 Sabbath-observant lifestyle.

One incident involves a Shabbat call he received from President Clinton.

He came home from synagogue and the phone rang. As was his practice, he waited until the answering machine clicked on to see if it was urgent enough to pick up. It turned out to be a White House staffer telling him to ignore the earlier message from Clinton, who had been phoning from overseas and had forgotten that in Washington it was still Shabbat. The matter was not urgent enough to interrupt Lew’s observance, Clinton told the staffer to tell Lew.

Going out of his way to keep Lew from breaking the Sabbath was a sign of the respect the president has for his observance, Lew tells people.

Another favorite line during his 1990s stint, when he lived in Washington (his family is now based in New York), was an exchange with clergy at Beth Sholom, a synagogue in Potomac, Maryland. Nathan Diament, who directs the Orthodox Union’s Washington office, recalled that a rabbi would suggest jokingly that Lew might want to run for synagogue treasurer. Lew would respond that directing the OMB was complex enough, thank you very much.

It’s a shtick that suggests a corny, old-fashioned sense of humor, but friends say it’s also one that is emblematic of his humility and cordiality.

“Everyone would recognize that Jack’s management style and personalit­y is noticeably different from that of the previous Jewish White House chief of staff,” Diament said, a reference to Emanuel’s abrasivene­ss.

An open question is how much harder it will be for Lew to balance family and Shabbat observance in his new role. He stays close to his daughter, Shoshana, who works at the Obama administra­tion’s Interior Department, but his wife and married son remain in Riverdale, New York, where they are active in the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale, in the Bronx borough of the city.

His previous stints – in addition to the OMB post, he was also a deputy secretary of state under Obama – involved managing a 9-to-5, Monday-to-friday bureaucrac­y. Aides say there were occasions that necessitat­ed work on Shabbat – for instance, during negotiatio­ns with Congress last year aimed at averting a government shutdown.

Running the White House, however, means dealing with crises that have a bad habit of happening on weekends.

“It’s a reflection of this administra­tion’s comfort with him and his being Jewish,” Foxman said. “This is a job that is 24/7 – but if there’s respect, it works.”

The Obama administra­tion, in any case, clearly wanted to the Jewish angle to come across. Shapiro tweeted the news in Hebrew to his followers – even though Israeli ambassador­s usually do not announce the the appointmen­t of a White House chief of staff.

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