Let’s demythologize the ‘Jewish vote’
The much-vaunted “Jewish vote” garnered even more attention this election than it normally does, culminating perhaps in one newscast that basically said that Florida’s Jewish voters would decide the national election. When you do the math, however, the diminishing Jewish vote is not what it used to be.
For sure, the voters in the Jewish minority in a handful of highly contested and vote-rich states do take voting seriously, making their votes appear so crucial in Florida, California, New York, New Jersey, and even Ohio. Those who put their political stethoscopes to our hearts and minds, however, may as well try to determine our favorite collective brisket recipe.
Jews tend to be more liberal and more Democratic than the typical voter, despite being more educated and wealthier. Next election, do not believe the cries of many Republicans who in 2012 again said that this time around, the Jewish community was going for their candidate. Exit polls had Barack Obama winning 69 percent of the Jewish vote – nine points down from the 78 percent exit polls said he garnered in 2008, but not enough of a drop to swing any critical states in Mitt Romney’s favor.
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We Jews are concerned about the economy and other issues, as are all citizens of these United States – so if anything, there is an American vote tinged with some Yiddishkeit, but it is not an Israeli vote.
We may bring our concerns about Israel into the voting booth, but we are not Israelis or their surrogates, and that electorate in any case is sharply divided on everything, so how could we be united when they are not?
The more we raise Israel as the primary “Jewish vote” issue, the more we make it appear that support for Israel is due only to a tiny but powerful group congealing to exercise its influence in great disproportion to its numbers. A longstanding tradition of broad, bi-partisan support for a strong and secure Israel is based on it being in the best interest of the United States and shared democratic traditions, rather than just pandering to the narrow interest of a small minority.
Jewish leaders, intellectuals, or hyperpartisans who insist that Jews must vote based on Israel alone make it appear that Israel is a client state of the United States and that it cannot exist without constant babying of Israelis and of Jews.
They tell us that only their favorite candidate will save Israel, while the other guy will destroy it. They set us all up for an even worse mythology that suggests that the United States is a client state of Israel, and that the two percent of United States citizens who swayed that last election, and the ones before it, are really a disloyal and secret cabal running the government and the nation’s foreign policy.
Such a mythology conjures up images of Paul Findley, Stephen Walt, John Mearsheimer, and Pat Buchanan, who referred to the Jews of the United States as “Israel’s amen corner.”
This tail does not wag the dog. Jewish American or American Jewish voters are just that, and when a Jew tells you that Israel is his or her only or main concern when voting, keep in mind that he or she is a tiny minority within a tiny minority, regardless of hanging chads in Palm Beach County.
The big item in this so-called Jewish vote is the relatively rapid growth of Orthodox Jews and their future voting choices, but they likely will remain marginal because of their concentration in only a few districts with large numbers in but a few states. Besides, the surveys say that even this group is more comfortable with Democrats than Republicans, even if the Democrat’s name is Barack Hussein Obama.
JNS.org
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