6/19/2016
The 2016 Election: Jews and their Politics
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The 2016 Election: Jews and Their Politics Dr. Steven Windmueller,
February 1, 2016 Filed Under: U.S. Policy, World Jewry 91
Institute for Contemporary Affairs Founded jointly with the Wechsler Family Foundation Vol. 16, No. 4
February 1, 2016
Twelve principles of American Jewish political practice are introduced here as a way to provide a roadmap to understand the nature and character of the Jewish community in this election year. Jews provide signi民cant 民nancial support to both political parties and to many candidates. Some analysts project that as much as 50% of all monies raised by Democratic presidential candidates are from Jewish funders; similarly, 25% of the Republican donor base is comprised today of major Jewish contributors. Jewish voters enter the political fray with a broad range of interests. An AJC study of the major concerns of American Jews conducted in August 2015 found the “U.S.-Israel Relationship” scored 民fth among the primary contending political and economic issues, noted by 7% of respondents. Every candidate seeking the presidential nomination has seen the need to reference his or her special connection to Israel, often invoking a reference to their personal relationships and/or political ties to the Jewish state. In each of the primary debates, candidates have taken the opportunity to refer to Israel as “America’s ally” or to acknowledge some other particular identi民cation. In a close election the “Jewish vote” becomes signi民cantly more important, and this factor is particularly true in such key “swing” states as Ohio, Florida and Pennsylvania. The Jewish community remains an important voting constituency in seven other states: New York, Massachusetts, Maryland, Illinois, New Jersey, California, and Connecticut.
http://jcpa.org/article/the2016electionjewsandtheirpolitics/
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