A war of words has erupted between the chairman of the Republican Party and the only Holocaust survivor in Congress, who compared a witness at a congressional hearing to a former Nazi who lied about his past.
U.S. Rep. Tom Lantos (D-Calif.) grew incensed at Republican attempts to portray Donald Smaltz, the independent counsel investigating the former U.S. secretary of agriculture, as a Democrat. In testimony during a House congressional hearing last week, Republicans questioning Smaltz portrayed him as a Democrat when, in fact, he has been a registered Republican since 1967.
Smaltz, too, left the impression that he has been a Democrat since the 1950s, when he was president of his college campus’ Young Democrats.
In questioning Smaltz, Lantos compared Smaltz’s selective history to that of Kurt Waldheim, the former United Nations secretary-general and president of Austria, who hid his Nazi past for decades.
Lantos told Smaltz that the counsel reminded him of Waldheim “who also had a lapse in memory. He conveniently forgot several years when he was a Nazi, and this came out after he left office.”
Smaltz shot back that he took “umbrage” at any comparison to Waldheim.
The total exchange at the hearing, which focused on Attorney General Janet Reno’s decision not to appoint an independent counsel to investigate Clinton and Vice President Al Gore for campaign fund-raising practices, took only two minutes.
But this week, Republicans and Democrats have spent hours on the issue.
Republican National Committee Chairman Jim Nicholson, in a widely circulated news release, demanded an apology from Lantos for comparing the Republican Party to the Nazis.
In an angry response, Lantos said his remarks were aimed only at Smaltz and demanded his own apology for the “totally inaccurate and misleading” news release.
Lantos defended his comparison of Smaltz to Waldheim, in remarks published in the San Francisco Chronicle.
“The more I think about it the more I think I was totally proper and correct,” Lantos said.
“If you overlook your involvement in the KKK, or the Nazi party, or the Republican Party, you are lying. You are deceitful.”
Four news releases later, Nicholson responded that Lantos “would be well served to tone down your incendiary rhetoric.”
Not surprisingly, the National Jewish Coalition, a Republican group, expressed support for Nicholson in the spat while the National Jewish Democratic Council backed Lantos.
But Ira Forman, executive director of NJDC, added that “one could argue that a more sensitive analogy could have been used” by Lantos.
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The Archive of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency includes articles published from 1923 to 2008. Archive stories reflect the journalistic standards and practices of the time they were published.