Special Dossier: Decision 5767 - Jewish
Perspectives
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A
variety of campaign buttons and stickers, each appealing
to Jewish sensibilities through the use of Judaic
symbols or the Hebrew language. One buttongives the
election year according to the Jewish calendar: 5761.
(Library of Congress) |
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I Am Jewish; Hear Me Vote
Each election season the National
Jewish Democratic Committee and the Republican
Jewish Council seem to redouble their efforts to influence the
Jewish vote. Depending on who you ask the Democrats seem to lock up
between 80 and 90 percent of the Jewish vote.
Why the sudden interest? Why have the
political elite chosen the chosen people to receive such attention
when we make up only 1.3%
of the US population.
Several reasons leap to mind:
High Jewish Turnout: We are the
people of the book. Jews on average are better educated than the
general population. Jeff Hauser of the NJDC says the demographics of
the community leads one to believe that Jewish turnout (particularly
in off-year elections) is much higher than average turnout. Jews make-up about 2.3% of the Pennsylvania
population, but Jews are expected to represent close to 5% of the
turnout this fall. In 2004 they may have been over 3% of turnout.
Jewish Fundraising: Republican
fiscal policy often favors the richest Americans, so it is not
surprising that most affluent groups contribute heavily to Republican
candidates. American Jews are the largest exception to this rule.
While the RJC has much bigger budgets than the NJDC, the Jewish world
at large gives much greater gifts to the Democratic committees (DNC,
DSCC, DCCC), Democratic candidates, and liberal 527's than Republican
Jews give to their comparable give to their comparable candidates and
organizations. Many
Jews see the Democratic domestic agenda more in line with their views
of Tikkun Olam and separation of Church and State. Republicans would
like to bring Jews in line with the rest of the upper class by
contending that Republicans provide better support of Israel, while
Democrats strive to preserve this key source of funding contending
that they provide more consistent support of Israel.
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Buttons,
stickers and other election memorabilia offer a snapshot
of Jewish participation in the political process as
members of Congress. (Library of Congress) |
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Policy Setting: Being better
educated on average has allowed Jews to assume positions among the
intellectual elite in our country. Opinion leaders are
disproportionately Jewish whether political consultants, policy folks,
high level civil servants in key federal bureaucracies (such as State,
OMB, Defense, Treasury, Justice, ...), high level political appointees
(federal agencies, White House, Congress, ...), political journalists,
political prognosticators, academic scholars. State Department, D whether in the media, on campus, in
the government, or on think tanks. By influencing Jewish thought, both
political parties hope to shape the political debate in this country.
Geographical Location: In our
democracy not all votes are equal. A voter in a red-state like Kansas
or a blue-state like Vermont is unlikely to have as much influence on
the electoral college or the U.S. Senate as a voter in a
"purple-state" like Florida, Ohio or Pennsylvania. In
Presidential elections, a voter in a large state such as California or
New York has more influence than a voter in a small state like Maine
or Wyoming. Many of the more influential states including Pennsylvania
has a disproportionate share of Jews sharing that power.
You might be fed up with all the
political ads you are getting. Who wants all of this attention from
political groups? However, participating in the political process is
an important civic duty. It is incumbent on us to study the issues
being debated, determine the best candidate, and go out and vote on
Tuesday, November 5.
Open House
The upcoming House
and Senate
elections are perhaps the most hotly contested mid-term elections in
recent history. Democrats see this as a chance to reestablish
checks and balances to an Administration run amuck. Republicans want
to keep the President unfettered as he pursues his agenda.
Typically, house districts are gerrymandered
to ensure safe seats for incumbents. They are engineered with enough
of an advantage so that the incumbent will win even with typical
changes in vote sentiment. In order to dominate as many seats as
possible, there is a temptation for political parties to cut this
built-in advantage as thin as they can. However, in a year like this
year when the tide has turned against the administration and the GOP
controlled Congress. As a result, Democrats stand an excellent chance
of overcoming their 29 seat deficit. As a result, prediction
(political sentiment) markets currently project that Republicans have
only a 40.6%
to 43.9% chance of maintain their control of the House as of this
writing.
Pennsylvania features not only a
rematch of the squeaker between Jim
Gerlach and Lois Murphy (6th
district), but a number of other hotly contested races: Curt Weldon
and Joe Sestak (7th district),
Mike Fitzpatrick and Patrick Murphy (8th district), Don Sherwood and
Chris Carney (10th district), and John Murtha and Diana Irey (12th
district).
'M' Is For Must, Middle and Missouri
The Republican advantage in the Senate
is on more reliable footing, Democrats have 44 Senators along with
Democratic-leaning Independent (formerly Republican) Jim Jeffords of
Vermont, while the Republicans have 55 Senators along with
Vice-President Richard Cheney who has the authority to break ties.
Since the Senate is renewed by thirds, only 33 seats are being
contested this year: 17 currently held by Democrats, 15 currently held
by Republicans along with the seat currently held by retired Vermont
Senator Jim Jeffords.
To take control of the Senate,
Democrats would need a net gain of 6 seats (presuming that independent
candidate Bernie Sanders wins Jim Jeffords' seat in Vermont and
continues to caucus with the Democrats as he does in the House).
Conversely, the
GOP needs to win ten Senate races to keep control of the Senate.
Wyoming, Arizona, Indiana, Maine, Nevada, Texas and Utah are basically
in the bag for them. The gambling sites give the GOP a significant
edge in Virginia (70%
to 79% to retain) and Tennessee (60%
to 65% to retain). They need just one more state to keep control
of the Senate. Again, according to the gambling sites the next easiest
race for them to win is Missouri where they have a 51%
to 54% chance of winning. (After that is NJ with a 48%
to 51% chance.)
By this standard Missouri is to 2006 as
Florida was to 2000 and Ohio was to 2004. It is the middle state which
might tip the Senate from Democratic to Republican control. Both
parties view it as a must win. As part of a possible Republican
"10 state strategy", the RJC has featured Senator Talent
(R-MO) on their website as "RJC Featured Candidate". No
wonder.
In the final analysis, Democrats can
wrest control of the Senate from the Republicans by winning every
seriously contended election. Any given battleground would not be so
difficult, but taking the Senate would be like hitting the trifecta or
pitching a no-hitter. The political sentiment markets only give the
Democrats at 20.2%
to 21.0% chance of doing that. The Democrats would have to play a
flawless game, for once.
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