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ByRobert Philpot, Robert Philpot

Analysis

If the US election comes down to the wire, all eyes will be on Jewish voters

The closest contest in decades could be decided by a comparatively small group of voters

November 3, 2016 11:51
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6 min read

Among the many mysteries to which a bleary-eyed America awoke the morning after the inconclusive 2000 presidential election were the results from Florida's Palm Beach county. Heavily Jewish and overwhelmingly liberal, its voters appeared to have cast 3,407 votes - more than three times his vote in any other county in the state - for Pat Buchanan, an ultraconservative candidate who had faced multiple accusations of antisemitism.

In truth, there was little mystery as to what had occurred in Palm Beach: a badly designed ballot paper had confused many elderly Jewish residents, leading them to vote inadvertently for Mr Buchanan. The consequence of their understandable bewilderment had historic ramifications: it deprived the Democrat presidential candidate, Al Gore, of the couple of hundred votes he needed to carry ultra-marginal Florida and, with it, win the presidency.

Polls carried out since the FBI announced last Friday that it was re-opening its investigation into Hillary Clinton's emails suggest the 2016 race could turn into a nail-biter. If so, Mrs Clinton will have good grounds for hoping that, in those swing states where she needs their backing, Jewish voters across the country will be rather more helpful to her cause than those of Palm Beach were to Mr Gore's.