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By

Gilbert Kahn

Analysis

Reality bites on electoral influence

November 15, 2012 15:20
1 min read

Election 2012 may well turn out to be historic for American Jews, but in many ways the results are ones about which Jews have been in denial.

After reality has set in, Democrats and Republicans will begin the hard job of determining the lessons to be learned from the election, including the nature and role of the 2.1 per cent of the population which constitutes American Jewry. It also needs to be a moment during which American Jews consider what their own future role is in American politics.

For all the talk about the clout of the Jewish voter, the post-election analysis has focused on Latinos, women, and young people, all key demographics for President Obama. While Jews are a small minority, 85-90 per cent vote in national elections. The conventional wisdom was that their turnout rate magnified their clout by a factor of four or five. In certain key states, since they tended to vote overwhelmingly Democratic, this clout was seen as even greater. In addition, politicians in both parties recognised that Jews historically made far more political contributions than their percentage of the national population. But this year's campaign pointed to a new financial reality for American Jews.

In Florida and Ohio, exit polls suggested that Mitt Romney only received the same 30-31 per cent of the Jewish vote that he received nationally, suggesting the intensive Republican campaign for Jewish votes in these swing states did not push the needle at all.

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