Friday Jun 20, 2025
NEWSLETTER
www.israelhayom.com
  • Home
  • Iran War
  • News
    • Gaza War
    • US Election Coverage
    • Middle East
    • Cyber & Internet
    • Business & Finance
  • Opinions
  • Jewish World
    • Archaeology
    • Antisemitism
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Culture
  • Magazine
    • Feature
    • Analysis
    • Explainer
  • In Memoriam
www.israelhayom.com
  • Home
  • Iran War
  • News
    • Gaza War
    • US Election Coverage
    • Middle East
    • Cyber & Internet
    • Business & Finance
  • Opinions
  • Jewish World
    • Archaeology
    • Antisemitism
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Culture
  • Magazine
    • Feature
    • Analysis
    • Explainer
  • In Memoriam
www.israelhayom.com
Home Commentary

Support for Trump among US Jews may be higher than predicted

The American-Jewish community has illustrated that when there is a discernible divide between the candidates concerning the issue of Israel, at least 10 percent swing to the candidate considered more favorable to it.

by  Farley Weiss
Published on  11-03-2020 12:02
Last modified: 11-03-2020 12:02
Support for Trump among US Jews may be higher than predictedReuters/Tom Brenner

A Trump supporter wearing a "Make America Great Again" kippah | Photo: Reuters/Tom Brenner

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The American-Jewish vote that has been traditionally and overwhelmingly Democrat might change in a significant way in Tuesday's US presidential election. The reason is the substantial gap between the significant pro-Israel policies of US President Donald Trump and those advocated by former Vice President Joe Biden.

Historically, the American-Jewish community has illustrated that when there is a discernible divide between the candidates concerning the issue of Israel, at least 10 % swing to the candidate considered more favorable to it.

In an Aug. 27, 2019 article, Gallup senior scientist Dr. Frank Newport wrote that "about nine in 10 American Jews are more sympathetic to Israel than to the Palestinians. (That compares to about six in 10 of all Americans.) Additionally, 95% of Jews have favorable views of Israel, while 10 % have favorable views of the Palestinian Authority – significantly more pro-Israel than the overall national averages of 71% favorable views of Israel and 21% favorable views of the Palestinian Authority."

Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter 

It is not surprising that the left-wing Jewish organization J Street, with its own agenda in mind, repeatedly tries to release polls that paint a different view of the Jewish vote, contradicting the extensive polling of Gallup and the actual voting history of the Jewish community, which shows the accuracy of Newport's analysis.

The most recent example can be seen in the 2018 Florida gubernatorial race, in which now-Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, made Israel an important issue in his campaign against Democrat Andrew Gillum. DeSantis was the leading member of Congress involved in moving the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and, during the race proclaimed that if elected, he would be the most pro-Israel governor in the United States.

Gillum also asserted that he was pro-Israel, and had visited Israel three times, yet he did not support the embassy move. A Fox News exit poll found that Gillum had won the Jewish vote in Florida by a 65-35% margin. It is noteworthy that this same poll found that Senator Rick Scott won only 27% of the Jewish vote against Senator Nelson in Florida, and a good case can be made for attributing this to Scott's not having made Israel the same major issue in his campaign as DeSantis had done.

Election workers check the signatures on mail-in ballots and for irregularities at the Los Angeles County Registrar Recorders' mail-in ballot processing center at the Pomona Fairplex in Pomona, California, Nov. 2, 2020 (EPA)

In 2016, Trump received around 24% of Florida's Jewish vote. And DeSantis's 35% of the Jewish vote represented around a 50% increase in support for a Republican candidate by Jewish voters in Florida.

Historically, the Jewish community did not always vote Democrat by the large margins that we have seen more recently. The Jewish community voted 40% for Republican Dwight Eisenhower. It then dropped to 18% for Richard Nixon against Hubert Humphrey.

But when George McGovern was perceived as not favorable to Israel, Nixon won 35 % of the Jewish vote in 1972 against McGovern. President Gerald Ford was not perceived well by the Jewish community due to his pressuring Israel during the two years after the 1973 Yom Kippur War. As a result, President Jimmy Carter received 71 % of the Jewish vote, which proved decisive in Carter's close win against Ford.

Ironically, Carter was then perceived as not being a friend of Israel's as compared with Ronald Reagan – and as a result, Carter received only 45% of the Jewish vote against Reagan's 39%, with the rest going to Independent John Anderson.

There is further evidence: In 1992, George H. W. Bush received 35% of the Jewish vote against Mike Dukakis, but with Secretary of State James Baker publicly blasting Israel by alleging that it did not care about peace, Bush's support in the Jewish community dropped to 11 %, and he lost the election to Democrat Bill Clinton, who won 80 % of the Jewish vote.

The Republican-Jewish vote finally got to 31% in 2012, when Republican candidate Mitt Romney faced President Barack Obama, specifically because many American Jews viewed Obama as being generally unfriendly to Israel and specifically hostile to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Like Gillum in Florida in 2018, Obama tried to claim that he was pro-Israel, yet his support in the Jewish community changed more than it did in any other group between his two elections. He won 78% of the Jewish vote against John McCain in 2008, but just 69% of the Jewish vote against Romney in 2012. Romney had not made Israel a major issue in the campaign, but it was a key topic in his last presidential debate, which helped him with the Jewish vote.

In 2016, support in the Jewish community dropped for Republican presidential candidate Trump to 24 %, but he was still able to win the election. The reason for his vote-drop in the Jewish community was because it largely perceived Hillary Clinton as pro-Israel from her days as a New York senator, even though it subsequently viewed her as doing Obama's bidding when she was secretary of state.

Trump did not make Israel a prominent issue in the last election; the topic barely came up in his debates, campaign speeches, or convention address.

Since his inauguration in January 2017, however, Trump has impressed the Jewish community with his strongly pro-Israel positions and actions – most significantly, the recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital and transfer of the US embassy there from Tel Aviv. He recognized Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights. Trump closed the Palestinian Authority office in Washington, DC and significantly cut financial aid to the P.A. (now it has been ended by the P.A. itself) because of its official policy of promoting and financing rewards for the murder of Israelis and American Jews.

Trump also designated the Jerusalem consulate as subordinate to the Jerusalem embassy. He withdrew America from the Obama-era 2015 Iran nuclear deal, a decision supported by the government of Israel. Unabashedly, the Islamic Republic of Iran routinely calls for Israel's total destruction; as a result, the Jewish community has been very concerned about Tehran.

Regarding the large Jewish voting bloc in Florida, the fact that Trump won Florida with 24% of the Jewish vote makes his victory in that state even more likely this time, as his Jewish support is thought to have increased substantially. Furthermore, Trump mentions the embassy move in every campaign speech, and his pro-Israel credentials were highlighted at the Republican National Convention, which Secretary of State Mike Pompeo addressed from Jerusalem.

In this light, Trump's recent decision to finally change US policy and allow American-Israeli dual citizens born in Jerusalem to have Israel listed as their place of birth on their US passports has an impact on many Jews and or their relatives, and will further help him with the Jewish vote.

It is important to note that Israel is a much more important issue for Jewish voters in a presidential election than it would be in a gubernatorial race. Democrats have tried to paint Trump as either anti-Semitic or sympathetic to white supremacists. The Trump campaign responded with a video of him denouncing white supremacy more than 30 times over the last few years.

A pro-Trump rally in Beit Shemesh, Israel, Oct. 2, 2020 (AFP)

His policies towards Israel and his December 2019 signing of the Anti-Semitism Protection Act to help Jews suffering discrimination on college campuses, show quite demonstrably that he has been a friend to Israel and the Jewish people.

Moreover, though Biden has been a friend of Israel and voted for the Jerusalem Embassy Act of 1995, he opposed the move of the embassy to Jerusalem – yet says he will not move it back if elected president. However, he also said that he would reopen the US consulate in eastern Jerusalem that had functioned as a type of embassy to the PA It is nevertheless unclear whether he would maintain Trump's recognition of eastern Jerusalem, which includes the Western Wall, as part of Israel.

Trump has ended US public criticism of Israeli settlement-building and a US policy of not allowing economic ties with Israeli businesses based in the settlements. Biden, on the other hand, has repeatedly and publicly criticized Israeli construction of houses not only in the settlements of Judea and Samaria but in eastern Jerusalem as well.

A significant concern to the Jewish community has been the influential role of the new Democrats in Congress and "squad" members Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar. Tlaib and Omar have been open about their support for the anti-Israel BDS movement, which – according to the international definition of anti-Semitism – is anti-Semitic. Instead of viewing these positions as anathema to the Democratic Party, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi endorsed both of them for reelection and, worse, contributed financially to their campaigns.

Subscribe to Israel Hayom's daily newsletter and never miss our top stories!

While Biden condemns BDS, he has failed so far to specifically condemn Tlaib or Omar. Biden also chose not to denounce Omar's endorsement of his campaign – the way he has repeatedly demanded that Trump denounce those extremists who might have endorsed his own. The contrast is glaring, yet often ignored.

Trump may not win Florida or the election. However, it is likely from non-partisan polls that he will increase his support among Jewish voters, because the Jewish community does consider a candidate's support for Israel as a major concern when it comes to casting a ballot.

Farley Weiss is president of the National Council of Young Israel. He is an intellectual property attorney for the law firm of Weiss & Moy.

Reprinted with permission from JNS.org.

 

Related Posts

Iran intensifies push for ceasefire; US: 'More days of pressure may be needed'AFP, GettyImages / Oren Ben Hakoon

Iran shows flexibility in talks, White House divided on Fordow strike

by Danny Zaken

A Western diplomat told Israel Hayom that Tehran has shifted from outright rejection to a “very flexible” willingness to discuss...

Rising to the momentRembrandt or workshop, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Rising to the moment

by Dror Eydar

For a fleeting moment, Israel experienced rare national consensus over the campaign against Iran. Even Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s staunchest...

The missiles kill – and they danceZain Jaafar / AFP

The missiles kill – and they dance

by Nadav Shargai

Palestinians rejoice even when Iranian missiles fall near them or among their houses. The hatred runs so deep.

Menu

Analysis 

Archaeology

Blogpost

Business & Finance

Culture

Exclusive

Explainer

Environment

 

Features

Health

In Brief

Jewish World

Judea and Samaria

Lifestyle

Cyber & Internet

Sports

 

Diplomacy 

Iran & The Gulf

Gaza Strip

Politics

Shopping

Terms of use

Privacy Policy

Submissions

Contact Us

About Us

The first issue of Israel Hayom appeared on July 30, 2007. Israel Hayom was founded on the belief that the Israeli public deserves better, more balanced and more accurate journalism. Journalism that speaks, not shouts. Journalism of a different kind. And free of charge.

All rights reserved to Israel Hayom

Hosted by sPD.co.il

  • Home
  • Iran War
  • News
    • Gaza War
    • US Election Coverage
    • Middle East
    • Cyber & Internet
    • Business & Finance
    • Sports
  • Opinions
  • Jewish World
    • Archaeology
    • Antisemitism
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Culture
  • Magazine
    • Feature
    • Analysis
    • Explainer
    • Environment & Wildlife
    • Health & Wellness
  • In Memoriam
  • Subscribe to Newsletter
  • Submit your opinion
  • Terms and conditions

All rights reserved to Israel Hayom

Hosted by sPD.co.il

Newsletter

[contact-form-7 id=”508379″ html_id=”isrh_form_Newsletter_en” title=”newsletter_subscribe”]

  • Home
  • Iran War
  • News
    • Gaza War
    • US Election Coverage
    • Middle East
    • Cyber & Internet
    • Business & Finance
    • Sports
  • Opinions
  • Jewish World
    • Archaeology
    • Antisemitism
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Culture
  • Magazine
    • Feature
    • Analysis
    • Explainer
    • Environment & Wildlife
    • Health & Wellness
  • In Memoriam
  • Subscribe to Newsletter
  • Submit your opinion
  • Terms and conditions

All rights reserved to Israel Hayom

Hosted by sPD.co.il