Real Clear Politics
 
GOP Scores Major Upset in NY-9
By _Caitlin  Huey-Burns_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/?author=Caitlin+Huey-Burns&id=22961)  
- September 14, 2011
 
HOWARD BEACH, N.Y. -- Three months after Democratic Rep. Anthony Weiner  
resigned his seat for sending vulgar pictures of himself to women on the  
Internet, businessman Bob Turner became the first Republican in nearly a 
century 
 to be elected to Congress from New York’s 9th district, delivering a 
simple but  sharp message to the White House that voters here will not be taken 
for  granted. 
A few minutes past midnight, after the race had been called for Turner, the 
 70-year-old retired cable television executive addressed a crowd of 
supporters,  most of them wearing black velvet yarmulkes, at the Roma View  
Restaurant.
 
“I’m telling you, I am the messenger -- heed us,” said Turner. “This 
message  will resound into 2012. We only hope our voices are heard and we can 
start  putting things right again." 
Turner defeated prominent Queens Democrat David Weprin, 54 percent to 46  
percent. Initially, the race was expected  to be an easy win for the  
district's long-entrenched Democratic machine. Democrats outnumber Republicans  
here by a 3-to-1 margin, and voters chose Barack Obama over John McCain in 2008 
 by 11 points. Weiner held the seat for a dozen years. And Weprin was a 
tested  candidate whose family has long been involved in Queens politics. 
Turner and his supporters credited Democrat and popular former Mayor Ed 
Koch  with turning that dynamic around. Koch, along with Democratic assemblyman 
Dov  Hinkin, crossed party lines to endorse Turner, citing concerns about 
Obama’s  support for a return to _Israel_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/israel/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolin
k) 
’s  pre-1967 borders. Israel became a significant issue in this race, as 
the  district holds one of the largest Jewish populations in the country. 
“President Obama, who is a nice guy and I helped elect him, he threw Israel 
 under the bus,” Koch said at Turner’s election night party. “We can turn 
this  election into a referendum. And we did, you did!” 
Weprin, the Democrat, is an Orthodox Jew who has notably broken with Obama 
on  Israel. He has visited the Jewish state eight times, but many in the 
Orthodox  community were concerned that Weprin would side with the White House 
as a  congressman and were also upset with his support of New York’s gay 
marriage  law. 
Despite Weprin’s rejection of this premise -- he told RCP on Tuesday, “I’m 
 glad [Turner] came around to my policy. The difference is that it’s been 
my  policy my whole life and it’s been his policy for 18 months, that’s the  
difference” -- he wasn’t able to take control of that part of the 
narrative. 
But Israel wasn’t the only issue in the race, and it’s important to note 
that  Orthodox Jews here tend to vote more conservatively on a number of 
issues. The  economy, which is the dominant theme of the presidential election, 
was also at  the forefront, and many voters said their frustration with the 
Obama  administration prompted them to cast their ballots as they did. 
“We have to get the current regime out,” said one voter exiting a polling  
station

-- 
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