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Democratic poll shows 71% of Jews across seven swing states favor Harris - The Jerusalem Post

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  jbb  •  3 months ago  •  8 comments

By:   The Jerusalem Post JPost. com

Democratic poll shows 71% of Jews across seven swing states favor Harris - The Jerusalem Post
Also consistent, according to the poll, is how respondents do not view Israel as their top issue at the ballot box. It ranked fourth among issues presented to the respondents.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


By RON KAMPEAS/JTAPublished: OCTOBER 9, 2024 07:47 US Vice President Kamala Harris delivers remarks at a press conference following a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Washington, D.C., U.S., July 25, 2024.(photo credit: REUTERS/Nathan Howard)

Also consistent, according to the poll, is how respondents do not view Israel as their top issue at the ballot box. It ranked fourth among issues presented to the respondents.


(JTA) — WASHINGTON — A poll commissioned by a Jewish affiliate of the Democratic Party shows Vice President Kamala Harris garnering 71% of the Jewish vote in the seven swing states likely to decide the election.

The poll released Wednesday by the Jewish Democratic Council of America and conducted from September 26-October 2 showed Donald Trump getting 26% of the vote just four weeks before the November 5 presidential election. The states include Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona, Georgia, North Carolina, and Nevada.

The polling by GBAO, a company that polls for liberal and Democratic groups, is consistent with a national poll of Jewish voters last month also commissioned by JDCA and carried out by GBAO. That poll showed Harris leading Trump among Jews 68%-25%, and 72% to 25% in a head-to-head race. Jews have historically voted in large majorities for the Democratic presidential candidate.

A large proportion of Jews live in states that are not considered battlegrounds — such as the Democratic strongholds of New York, California, New Jersey, and Illinois, or Florida, which is expected to vote Republican — and as such are not expected to determine which candidate gets their state's electoral votes. This latest poll — by honing in on the swing states of Nevada, Arizona, North Carolina, Georgia, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania — makes the case that Jewish voters could help deliver the election to Harris.

"In the states that will decide the outcome of this election, Jewish Americans are strongly motivated to vote - and the vast majority are planning to vote for Kamala Harris," said Halie Soifer, the JDCA CEO.

FACING OFF: US presidential candidates Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump. (credit: JEENAH MOON/REUTERS, MARCO BELLO/REUTERS)

The poll also runs up against claims by Jewish Republicans that Jews in the swing states are due to vote in higher numbers for Trump. At the Republican Jewish Coalition's convention in September, CEO Matt Brooks said the group had data showing almost half of Jewish voters in swing states would vote for Trump. A poll by the Orthodox Union also showed a closer race for the Jewish vote in the crucial swing state of Pennsylvania.

According to the Democratic poll, Jewish voters in the Sun Belt states — Nevada, Arizona, North Carolina, and Georgia — skewed older and more conservative than Jewish voters in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, said GBAO's principal, Jim Gerstein, in an interview.

Still, he said, the tendency to favor Harris over Trump was consistent across the states and was good news for Democrats.

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"Trump is as hated in the battleground states as he is hated in the general population among Jewish voters," Gerstein said.

Also consistent, according to the poll, is how respondents do not view Israel as their top issue at the ballot box. It ranked fourth among issues presented to the respondents, with 16% saying it was their top issue — though that was higher than the national poll of Jews, who ranked it ninth. Ahead of Israel in the poll of swing state Jews was the future of democracy, which 44% of respondents view as their top issue; abortion which garnered 36%, and inflation and the economy, which garnered 24%.

GOP believes left-wing antisemitism will erode Jewish support for Dems


Despite Democrats' historic advantage among Jews, Republicans believe that the domestic turmoil and spike in antisemitism unleashed last year by Hamas' invasion of Israel — including at protests against Israel's conduct in progressive redoubts such as college campuses, will erode Jewish support for Harris. Republicans also point to increased calls among some progressive Democrats to cut defense spending to Israel.

Trump has said he has seen polling that would garner him 40% of the Jewish vote, around 10 points more than recent Republican candidates have typically received, although he did not cite the specific polls. He also has said 40% is not enough — he wants 100% — and said that "the Jewish people" will be to blame if he is not elected.

Jewish Democrats say that such warnings and Trump's repeated claims that Jewish Democrats ought to have their "head examined" are antisemitic. A JDCA ad released Tuesday shows a young Jewish woman having her "head examined" — and then outlining why she would never vote for him.

Another poll of Jewish voters showed a more favorable result for Republicans. A study carried out in late July and early August for the Orthodox Union's Teach Coalition found that among Pennsylvania Jewish voters, Harris' lead was 52% to Trump's 41%, a considerably narrower gap than the 65%-70% Jewish voters traditionally deliver to Democratic nominees.

Bradley Homan, CEO of the Honan Strategy Group, which carried out the poll for the Orthodox Union, said he was seeing a shift among Jewish voters that could help deliver a Trump win in Pennsylvania, where there are more than 300,000 likely Jewish voters, and which Trump lost by just over 80,000 votes in 2020.

"We saw this as potentially a significant realignment of the voting coalition that we're not seeing with any other Democratic demographic in American politics," Homan said in an interview.

The two polls employed different methodologies: The JDCA weighted its poll according to data by the Pew Research Center that breaks down the percentage of Jewish Americans according to their affiliation — or non-affiliation — with the various religious streams, as well as age and gender. The Orthodox Union poll was not weighted.

The JDCA poll reached 800 voters by text across the seven states, while the O.U. poll reached 400 voters in Pennsylvania by phone. Both polls had a margin of error of approximately 3.5%.

Soifer said she was confident Jewish voters would stay the course with Democrats.

"The Jewish American electorate has been incredibly consistent in its overwhelming rejection of Donald Trump," she said. "This poll demonstrates that 2024 is no different and that Donald Trump - who received 25% of the Jewish vote in 2016 - has made zero inroads with Jewish voters in the past eight years."


Article is LOCKED by author/seeder
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JBB
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JBB    3 months ago

Contrary to what you may have heard, American Jews overwhelmingly support Harris - Walz 2024!

original

 
 
 
George
Junior Expert
1.1  George  replied to  JBB @1    3 months ago

She is going to need every one of them in the swing states.

Since last month, Harris’ 6-point advantage in Pennsylvania has been trimmed to 3 points when third party candidates are included. In Michigan, a 5-point Harris edge has been erased, with no clear leader between Trump at 50% and Harris at 47%. The race in Wisconsin is also razor-thin, with Trump getting the support of 48% of likely voters compared to 46% for Harris.

Kalamentum........HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
1.1.1  seeder  JBB  replied to  George @1.1    3 months ago

original

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
2  Greg Jones    3 months ago

Harris is in real trouble and is polling much worse that Hillary did in 2016. Will her reaction be the same as Hillary's when she loses to Trump?

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
2.1  Vic Eldred  replied to  Greg Jones @2    3 months ago

And memes aren't going to help.

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
2.1.1  seeder  JBB  replied to  Vic Eldred @2.1    3 months ago

Trump will not get 30% of American Jewish votes November 5th! 

 
 
 
MrFrost
Professor Guide
2.2  MrFrost  replied to  Greg Jones @2    3 months ago
Harris is in real trouble and is polling much worse

Wrong again, Greg...

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
2.2.1  Buzz of the Orient  replied to  MrFrost @2.2    3 months ago

Polls are SO easy to manipulate, the nature of the questions, the makeup of the persons polled, the interpretation of the results, that it is really hard to rely on them.  However, if the recorded results are as shown on those charts in the linked article, who the hell is behind the Rasmussen group?  Personally, I would rely on Allan Lichtman's prediction more than ANY of the polls.  Do the Las Vegas bookies enter into the fray? 

 
 

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