What happens when Israel is your lowest priority?
by Jonathan S. Tobin
Israel Hayom
May 24, 2019
The good news for U.S. President Donald Trump coming out of a new poll of Jewish voters is that he shouldn’t take their indifference about his pro-Israel policies too personally.
The survey published this week that was conducted by Greenberg Research for the Jewish Electoral Institute tells us a lot of things that we already knew: the vast majority of Jewish voters identify as Democrats and are disproportionately liberal compared to other Americans. They also really, really don’t like Trump, with 71% disapproving of his presidency and only 29% approving of his performance in office.
That may strike Trump and other Republicans as astonishing considering that by any objective standard, Trump has been the most pro-Israel president America has ever had, as his policy shifts on Jerusalem, the U.S. embassy, the Golan Heights, Iran and accountability for the Palestinians have demonstrated.
But if there is one number that you can learn from a deep dive into the survey’s findings, it’s that only 28% of the Jews polled say that support for Israel is one of the most important issues that determine how they vote. That puts it on the bottom of a list of issues presented to them, ranking far below concerns about protecting Medicare and Social Security (the No. 1 issue), health care, gun control, abortion, the Supreme Court, education, taxes and immigration, among others. As the executive summary of the poll summed it up, “Israel is the lowest policy priority for Jewish voters.”
Greenberg Research is a liberal Democratic polling firm. That bias was reflected in the wording of some of the questions and the fact that it asked respondents their opinion of “white supremacists and the far-Right,” though didn’t ask about left-wing anti-Semitism. Still, the results do seem to reflect the reality of a voting bloc that remains firmly in the pockets of the Democrats.
That only Orthodox and politically conservative Jews consider Israel a priority is not really news. But the poll demonstrates anew that nothing Trump might do for Israel would impact the opinions of Jewish voters much one way or the other. Indeed, the favorable/unfavorable numbers for Trump are almost identical to the breakdown of the Jewish vote in the 2016 election, when 70% of Jewish voters backed Hillary Clinton.
That level of partisanship and personal animus for the president is also reflected in Jewish views about anti-Semitism and the security of the Jewish community. The Pittsburgh and Poway synagogue shootings are the reason why the survey said that 73% of Jews felt less secure than two years ago. Yet a stunning 59% agreed with a leading question posed by Greenberg that asked whether Trump “was at least partially responsible” for the attacks on synagogues in Pittsburgh and Poway.
When given a choice of factors that might cause attacks on Jews, the most popular response was “President Trump encouraging ultra-right extremists committing violent attacks.” And when asked about the best way to ensure Jewish security, 39% thought defeating Trump was the answer. By contrast, only 12% thought adding “armed security” at synagogues and Jewish institutions might help.
Trump is a flawed leader, and he is guilty of helping to coarsen our public discourse and holds views about issues like immigration that most Jews find abhorrent. But the belief that he is encouraging those committing violent attacks on synagogues doesn’t stand up to scrutiny when you consider that those responsible were deeply opposed to Trump specifically because they considered him too friendly to the Jews.
The notion that anti-Semitism was somehow lying dormant until January 2017 and that throwing the most pro-Israel administration to date out of office and replacing it with the party that is prepared to tolerate the likes of boycott, divestment and sanctions movement supporters and anti-Semites like Reps. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) and Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) will make Jews safer strains credulity.
In an era of almost unprecedented levels of partisanship, and in which Americans view those with different political views with the same sort of suspicion they once reserved for believers in other religious faiths, it would seem that Jews – who, along with African-Americans are among the most reliable supporters of the Democrats –are also prepared to believe the worst of those on the other side of the political divide. That doesn’t give Trump or the Republicans much reason for optimism in 2020 with respect to a Jewish community that seems to subscribe to the “everyone I don’t like is Hitler” view of politics.
There is, however, one reason for a sliver of hope for Republicans in the future. Greenberg’s summary notes that Jewish millennials are, like other young voters, more inclined to be culturally liberal. Yet the divide in other groups shows that older voters are more conservative and inclined to support Trump. However, in the Jewish population, it’s the reverse; older Jews are more against the president than the young, even among non-Orthodox. Trump’s levels of support among Jewish millennials and Jewish voters under 30 are significantly higher than among those who are older, even if those that back him are still a clear minority.
When you factor in the fact that the Orthodox – a majority of whom back Trump – are the only demographic slice of the community that is actually growing, and that the non-Orthodox population is declining, it’s clear that the Democrats advantage among Jews is likely to decline in future elections.
But anyone wondering why the Democrats’ toleration of Omar and Tlaib in their ranks hasn’t moved the needle in terms of Jewish opinion need look no further than Greenberg’s findings about Jewish priorities. When Israel isn’t one, then there should be no surprise about the willingness of so many Jews to believe in unsubstantiated allegations about Trump’s anti-Semitism and to be indifferent to his Middle East policies.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Liberal Jews don’t give a fuck that Israel will come to rue the day when their beloved anti-Semitic Democratic Party will regain control of the White House.
The spoiled Jewish students at Berkeley, Harvard and other universities who have joined forces with Palestinian students against Israel have absolutely no idea of what it is like to live in a country where Jews are hated and persecuted. But with anti-Semitism taking root in the Democratic Party, they may yet get to experience that in their lifetime.
8 comments:
Rightly or wrongly the younger generation of non orthodox don’t support the current actions of the right wing government in Israel. Their behavior, is simply inconsistent with the Jewish values young Jews embrace in America. They meet Palestinians in America, and they become friends with them on college campuses. They don’t think that the apartheid laws preventing the government from recognizing Jewish marriages to Arabs are just. They don’t think ripping up Palestinian olive groves to allow settlements to expand is defendable. They don’t believe that denying building permits to Arabs in east Jerusalem while letting settlements expand with impunity is consistent with what most jews are taught at home.
We are a people who marched for civil rights, died in Mississippi so blacks could vote, helped start the NAACP and have always stood for social justice and with the underdog. The actions of the current Israeli government shock us and are appalling to us.
We love Judaism and Israel, however we have to speak out when injustices occur by anyone , including the current likud government.
I'm sorry Mr. Goldberg, but your comment really disgusts me.
Of the 'wrongs' you've listed, they've been taken by Israel to protect itself from its enemies, the Palestinians and other Arabs that want to obliterate the Jewish state.
You state, "We are a people who marched for civil rights, died in Mississippi so blacks could vote, helped start the NAACP." And what thanks did we get for that? The majority of blacks harbor anti-Semitic thoughts.
As for that "younger generation of non orthodox" Jews, they have absolutely no idea of what it is like to live in a country where Jews are hated and persecuted. As a refugee from Nazi Germany, I think I know something about that. Most German Jews, were not wanted in other countries and had no Israel to flee to. As a result they died in the Holocaust. With anti-Semitism taking root in the Democratic Party, those young Jews you mention may yet in their lifetime experience the hatred Jews suffer from in other countries.
You say you love Israel. Your comment belies that!
It is because I don’t want to live in a country where Jews are hated that I, and young , sane Jews speak out against Israel. We are not safer because a Palestinian family is thrown off their land to make way for an expanded settlement , we are less safe, because that creates hate against Jews.
Furthermore, sychophantic approval of every action The Israeli government takes does not make us anymore safe, but much less safe.
As someone whose grandparents were gassed to death by the nazis , I will never be silent in the face of injustice, I will speak out irrespective of who is committing the wrong.
The actions of the Israeli government are not Jewish or even Zionist, but in some cases evil. The younger generation just is not willing to “drink the coolaide “ and look the other way because the party in the wrong happens to be part of the tribe.
If israel fails to change its ways it will be a disaster for our breatheran there and will lead to boycotting and other negative consequences the world over. When you love someone you are honest with them, you don’t tell them to keep doing something that will ultimately hurt them.
Goldberg, you are a sorry ass excuse for a true Jew. FYI, both sets of my grandparents went to the Nazi gas chambers because there was no Israel for them to flee to.
In order to survive, Israel must take draconian steps. You and your fellow ersatz Jews do not understand that or do not eant to understand that.
Jews are hated in our country and throughout the world, not because of how Israel treats the Palestinians, but simply because they are Jews. Get that through your thick head, you miserable worm.
I've given you all the space you're going to get on this blog. Go back under that rock you crawled out from!
Goldberg, I should have added that Israel's most dangerous enemies are not the Arabs. Israel's most dangerous enemies are American Jews like you and the younger generation of non-orthodox Jews you referred to.
It's not like you to hold back like that Howie. You must be getting mellower with age.
The pogrom’s didn’t wait for Israel to exist, they started well before its existence. There has been anti semitism as long as there has been Jews.
Israel wants peace, it signed a very painful peace treaty with Egypt, one that gave up energy security for true peace. The Egyptian’s had a rational leader that could carry through on his commitments; the Palestinians have Hamas and Islamic jihad, who are sworn to anilate Israel.
It is truly unfortunate that Israel is forced into doing some of the more draconian things it has to do, but it is all based on its survival.
It has been proven that when Arafat didn’t like the way negotiations were going he ordered suicide bombings. Hamas is worse.
Ultimately, the Palestinians will realize that the only way to have peace is through mutual concessions and rational leadership. Then there will be a peace treaty and we can see an end to this insanity.
The bds movement, and the Satmar and younger Jewish support for the Palestinians is based on ignorance and ultimately will cause more bloodshed if successful.
Bryan, thank you for your comment on why Israel is forced to take draconian steps in order to keep from being obliterated. Your comment is so refreshing compared to the foul Israel-hating comments that have been made on this blog by the liberal Jewish worm Milton Goldberg and by the ultra-orthodox Yehuda Cohen.
It's too bad that those younger Jews who are supporting BDS and the Palestinians haven't ever suffered from the hatred and persecution of Jews that other Jewish people have and are experiencing in other countries. If that happened to them, they would sing a different song about Israel.
God bless you, Bryan!
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