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Analysis

Jewish voters ponder Israel and their safety as Kamala takes over

In recent years more Jews have voted Republican Party or registered as independents than previously

July 25, 2024 08:21
Online_Kamala and trump collage
3 min read

Ever since Franklin Delano Roosevelt ran for president in 1932, the Democratic Party has enjoyed support from vast swathes of Jewish voters.

Jews were viewed as one of the most consistently liberal and Democrat-friendly groups, with seven out of ten Jewish adults characterising their politics as liberal, according to a 2020 survey by Pew Research Centre. But in recent years that trend has changed, with more Jewish voters defecting to the Republican Party or registering as independents.

While taxes, inflation, immigration, abortion, gun rights and healthcare used to be among the key issues determining an election, this November more Jewish Americans will be single-issue voters than ever before, focused on which party or candidate takes antisemitism more seriously. New Yorker Alyssa Sadoff, 59, who works in the nonprofit sector, says she has always considered a range of social and political issues when casting her vote, but that has since changed. “If we can’t protect and save ourselves, we won’t have the privilege of voting on other issues,” she says. “I’ve been fundraising and advocating for everyone else’s rights and welfare, but now I am singularly focused on protecting and advocating for ourselves.”

Antisemitic incidents in the US reached record highs in 2023, up 140 per cent compared to 2022, according to the Anti-Defamation League (ADL). The more than 8,800 incidents recorded by the ADL last year – including vandalism and physical assault on Jewish people at schools, community centres and on the streets – was the highest number recorded since the organisation began tracking such data in 1979.