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Jonathan Boyd

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Jonathan Boyd,

Jonathan Boyd

Opinion

Nine places where a Jewish vote could count

Is there a Jewish vote? And if so, where might it make a difference?

December 5, 2019 15:43
Mike Freer -  will he hang on in Finchley and Golders Green?
3 min read

Despite the claims of antisemitic conspiracy crackpots everywhere, Jews don’t actually control the world. We have negligible influence over anything really. The old Yiddish saying “mann tracht, un Gott lacht” captures it; we can make all sorts of plans, but God — or whatever other force you happen to believe in (in my case, it’s usually my wife) — has an uncanny knack of laughing in our faces.

So when it comes to general elections, we have next to no ability to affect the eventual outcome. Even in the constituency with the largest Jewish population — Finchley and Golders Green — 2011 Census data demonstrates we only comprise 21 percent of the whole. I’ve tried to massage that figure to see if I can give us a bit more statistical strength, but even accounting for Jewish population growth in the area since 2011, our older than average age profile and our greater than average tendency to vote, the best I can conjure up is 36 percent. That said, we can’t just blame our size for our lack of influence — Jews in Israel, who comprise 75 percent of the country’s population, are struggling to create a government at all.

Yet it is still tempting to explore where our votes might have the most impact next week. One way of thinking about this is by calculating how many Jews are entitled to vote in each constituency and comparing that number with the size of the majority held in each place. If the former is larger than the latter, our votes there may count a little more.

This is only the case in nine constituencies. Finchley and Golders Green is one: about 23,000 Jews will be eligible to vote there in 2019, and their votes matter a great deal: the sitting MP, Conservative Mike Freer, only holds a majority of 1,657 over Labour. Most polls there are predicting a Tory victory, but none include any kind of ‘Jewish factor’ in their models, so any unexpected volatility among Jewish voters (there’s been some stuff going on with antisemitism in the Labour Party apparently? And a Jewish LibDem candidate?), could affect the accuracy of their projections.