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Jennifer Lipman

ByJennifer Lipman, Jennifer Lipman

Opinion

Youth vote matters in Judaism

The United Synagogue could learn from Jeremy Corbyn's successes, says Jennifer Lipman

June 27, 2017 10:07
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3 min read

Was it the yoof wot won it? Actually, initial analysis suggests it was voters born after the 1970s. YouGov’s preliminary findings indicate Labour swept up more votes for every age-group under 49.

So how did someone considered so unelectable come within such close proximity to power? The suggestion is that Jeremy Corbyn did so by responding to people’s anxieties. He listened when parents worried about school funding, when junior doctors went on strike, when twentysomethings looked gloomily at their future.

Acknowledging these concerns made a difference. And while some might scoff at Anglo-Jewry learning anything from Mr Corbyn, his victory is instructive, particularly for the mainstream Orthodox community.

Put simply, that community must not be complacent that the next generation will remain in the fold. In 2010, research found that, in 20 years, central Orthodox synagogue membership (which includes the United Synagogue) had fallen from two thirds of all members to 55 per cent, while membership of “non-Orthodox” shuls relative to “Orthodox” ones had increased to 30.8 per cent. Seven years on, you’d expect those trends to be even more pronounced.