For months, polls remained incredibly tight. Americans were divided between those who felt burned by Biden-Harris administration policies and those who couldn’t stomach another term of Donald Trump. That divide carried over into the Jewish community.
Within the American Jewish community, October 7 and its aftermath added another wrinkle. American Jews have interpreted President Biden’s “ironclad” support for Israel differently since October 7, but there’s been more of a consensus that Kamala Harris is more hostile. Harris made a conscious effort to publicly criticise Israel and make supportive comments about anti-Israel protesters. She publicly warned Israelis not to go into Rafah, and she made a point of skipping Prime Minister Netanyahu’s address to Congress for a sorority event.
Meanwhile, she’s never agreed to meet with Jewish university students about campus antisemitism — and according to recent Harvard graduate Shabbos Kestenbaum, they’ve asked her.
The Biden-Harris administration’s reaction to Israel’s security emergency and surging domestic antisemitism, along with their weakness toward the Iranian regime, have clearly prompted some members of the Jewish community to rethink their traditional voting loyalties.