Washington Watch: Are Jewish voting patterns changing?
Orthodox Jews are far more likely to put Israel as a top priority in making choices at the polls.
By DOUGLAS M. BLOOMFIELD
Some recent news articles remind us why most American Jews consistently vote Democratic, but they also offer a warning of how that could change in another generation.That has less to do with how the political parties will change but how we as a community are changing.Israel’s security and well-being have long been important to Jewish voters, but Republican efforts to make that a partisan wedge issue have consistently failed. That reflects the broad consensus among Israel’s supporters that both parties are equally committed to our special relationship with the Jewish state, but even more, it reveals the dearth of issues on which the Republican Party appeals to Jewish voters.That was brought home again last week in a Jewish Telegraphic Agency report of extensive Jewish support for President Barack Obama’s gun control initiatives to ban assault rifles and high-capacity ammunition magazines and to toughen background checks on gun purchases. Most Democrats share that view while most Republicans, in lockstep with the National Rifle Association, are opposed.The Reform, Conservative and Orthodox umbrella organizations, along with the Jewish Council on Public Affairs and a number of other Jewish organizations have expressed strong support for the president’s proposals.NUMEROUS RECENT polls and, more important, elections consistently have shown Jewish voters siding with Democrats on a broad menu of issues, including immigration, reproductive rights, gender rights, civil liberties, gun control, global warming and government regulation of big business.Republican efforts to cut Social Security and Medicare benefits in order to finance tax cuts for the wealthiest one percent didn’t help either.Those issues were on clear view in the 2012 presidential campaign and can be expected to reappear in 2016.Already, Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wisconsin), Mitt Romney’s running mate last year and a leading contender for the next GOP presidential nomination, has chosen as one of the first bills to support in the new Congress legislation that would bestow full constitutional rights – “personhood” – on a fertilized human egg in the womb.Another early contender, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Florida), is seeking to do damage control on an issue that did considerable harm to Republicans last year: immigration reform. The stridently anti-immigration and xenophobic tea party wing of the GOP and its allies last year cost the party dearly among Hispanic voters, who are the nation’s largest and fastest growing minority.