The Jewish vote in the US is minuscule, but should still count - opinion

Date06 December 2020
AuthorAMY KLEIN
Published date06 December 2020
"I just found out my parents are voting for Trump," she said, distressed.

I understood her dismay. As women who were raised in Modern Orthodox communities in New York in the 1980s, we both believed in Jewish values like pursuing justice (tzedek, tzedek tirdof) and repairing the world (tikkun olam). Decades ago, our families and communities were firmly allied with the Democratic Party and its values.

But neither one of us remained observant, and the community that we left is not the same as it was.

That's why I was not surprised that her family had voted for Trump.

Even though I don't talk politics with my ultra-Orthodox family, because I want to keep talking to them), I know they supported Trump both in 2016 and 2020 (unlike my friend's Modern Orthodox parents, who'd voted for Hillary back in 2016). Most ultra- and Modern Orthodox Jews on the East Coast, and quite a few Conservative Jews, swung Right, too.

In the aftermath of the election – if we ever get to an aftermath – there will be much analysis of demographics: the age, gender, race, education level, socioeconomic status, and religion of who voted for which candidate and why (and especially why the polls were so fantastically off).

Already the media has gotten it wrong when it comes to one group, Latinos. Or Hispanics. Whatever nomenclature one uses, the tallies were off. In Florida they handily voted for Trump, but the swing states of Arizona, New Mexico and Philadelphia turned out to be crucial in ousting the incumbent.

"Here's why the Latino vote is so divided," Steven Odali Rodriguez wrote on the online open digital platform Medium, breaking down the Latino vote by country of origin, age, generation since immigration, gender and religion. "The truth is we do not all hold the same interests," he said.

A writer for The New York Times opined, "Democrats may need to rethink their strategy as the class complexities and competing desires of Latino and Asian-American demographic groups become clear."

I am certainly no expert on demographics, but I do know one thing: Like Asian-Americans and Latinos, we Jews are clearly not under one umbrella. In fact, the stark schism in the Jewish vote has been growing for years. According to the Pew Research Center, the Jewish vote has been going from an 80-20 Democrat/Republican split since 2000 toward more of a 70-30 split. In 2000, 79% of Jews voted Democrat vs. 19% Republican; in 2004, it was 74-25, and in 2012, 69-30.

AP VOTECAST had the split this year at 68%...

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