Jerusalem Post
 
 
Turner  victory highlights Obama's slippage among Jews 
_By HERB  KEINON_ (http://www.jpost.com/Authors/AuthorPage.aspx?id=107)  
09/14/2011  20:06 

Analysis:  Democrat's downfall in NY's 9th district shows US president's 
waning support  among American Jewish community no longer anecdotal. 


 
Up until  Tuesday night’s surprise victory of Republican Bob Turner over 
Democratic David  Weprin in the heavily Jewish and Democratic 9th New York 
Congressional District,  news of US President Barack Obama’s waning support 
among American Jews was  largely anecdotal.

Every once in a while stories of  traditionally-Democratic Jews 
articulating deep concern for Obama’s treatment of  Israel would appear in the 
general 
media or US political websites. There was  also the occasional story about 
Jews who donate large amounts to the Democratic  Party saying that as a 
result of their disenchantment with the White House’s  Middle East policies, in 
the next election cycle they would think  twice.

In addition to the anecdotal evidence, there were also the  extrapolatory 
proofs.

Number-crunchers looked at the exit polls from the 2008 Presidential  
election that showed that Obama took 78 percent of the Jewish vote, compared  
that with polls that showed the Democrats took “just” 66% of the Jewish vote 
in  the midterm 2010 election, noted that the president’s approval rating in 
the  summer among Jews was “only” 60%, and concluded that Obama was losing 
the  Jews.

Not all the Jews – not even a majority of the Jews – but enough to  make a 
difference in the 2012 presidential election.

Turner’s victory  over Weprin Tuesday showed that this thesis no longer 
exists only in the  anecdotal or extrapolatory realm.

Turner’s victory was the most serious  sign of erosion to date in 
American-Jewish support for Obama; the most serious  shot from the Jewish 
community 
across the White House’s bow; the most serious  message from Jewish voters of 
concern about the president’s stand on  Israel.

And while it is undeniable that Israel was not the only issue in  the 
campaign, it is equally undeniable that it was among the top issues. The  other 
major issue was the economy.

History has shown that as one specific  factor, Israel is not enough to 
drive Jews to vote against a Democratic  candidate.

But put Israel together with a faltering economy that is also  impacting 
negatively on America’s Jews, and more Jews than usual may currently  be ready 
to bolt the Democrats than in the past.

New York’s election  shows Obama is in trouble with significant swaths of 
US Jews. To give an  indication of how much dissatisfaction there is, keep in 
mind that New York’s  9th District has not voted for a Republican 
congressman since 1920, and that  Weprin is an Orthodox Jew who is a strong 
supporter 
of Israel.

Ari  Fleischer, former White House press secretary under George W. Bush, 
said at a  panel discussion at the AIPAC conference in May that if Obama wins 
over the Jews  4:1, as he did last time, he wins the next election; but that 
if he only takes  the Jews 3:1, he’s in trouble.

A shift of a few percentage votes among  Jews in 2012 in key battleground 
states with large Jewish populations such as  Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania, 
could have a huge impact in a close presidential  race.

Some will say that the Jews who live in the Queens and Brooklyn  
neighborhoods that make up the 9th District that was up for grabs Tuesday – the 
 
district that once belonged to disgraced ex-congressman Anthony Weiner – are 
not  
reflective of American Jewish demographics: that the Jews there tend to be 
more  religious and more Russian than the national average, which makes them 
more  conservative.

However, the Jewish demographics in southern Florida, where  presidential 
elections have been won and lost before, does reflect to some  degree the 
demographics in Queens and Brooklyn, as many of the Jews in south  Florida hail 
from areas represented in the contested congressional district: Kew  
Gardens, Forest Hills and Sheepshead Bay.

None of this, obviously, is  lost on the Obama administration, which, by 
appointing an empathetic and  sympathetic ambassador to Israel, Dan Shapiro, 
earlier this year, and hiring  veteran Jewish political insider Ira Forman in 
August as its Jewish liaison, is  taking what it has described as its “
messaging” problem to the Jewish community  very seriously, and trying to 
correct it.

An indication of how serious  the problem is being taken came earlier this 
week, when the National Jewish  Democratic Coalition sent out an e-mail 
blast highlighting Prime Minister  Binyamin Netanyahu’s warm expression of 
gratitude to Obama Saturday for what he  did to free the six Israeli security 
guards holed up in the ransacked Israeli  embassy in Cairo.

It is safe to say that this email blast – obviously  intended to show 
American Jews how much Obama does care about Israel – made its  way into the 
inbox of thousands of Jewish voters who went to the poll in New  York’s special 
election on Tuesday. Apparently, however, it didn’t make much of  a dent.

The lesson is clear: It will take much more from Washington, and  many more 
heartfelt expressions of gratitude from Netanyahu to Obama, to  convince a 
significant part of the American Jewish community that former New  York 
mayor Ed Koch was wrong when, while campaigning for Turner in New York’s  9th 
District, said Obama “is willing to toss it [Israel] under the bus.”

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to