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NEW YORK – NOVEMBER 07:  A Hasidic Jewish man prepares to vote November 7, 2006 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. Mid-term elections take place across the U.S. today with the balance of power in Congress at stake.  (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)
A hasidic man prepares to vote in Brooklyn, NY on November 7, 2006. Mario Tama/Getty Images.
Observation

November 22, 2024

Podcast: Maury Litwack on the Jewish Vote in the 2024 Elections

By Tikvah Podcast at Mosaic

For decades, the Jews were solidly Democratic. Now their votes are up for grabs.

Podcast: Maury Litwack

Jewish Americans have been loyally voting for Democratic presidential candidates since the early decades of the 20th century. And a very great many Jews supported Vice-President Harris in the election earlier this month. But the exit-poll results reported by most news outlets—that 79 percent of the Jewish voting public cast their ballots for Harris—are, at the very least, open to some very serious questions, and probably altogether unrepresentative.

The poll that generated the figure of 79-percent Jewish support for the Democratic nominee, it turns out, does not include results from the states of New York, New Jersey, and California—three states that contain some of the most densely populated Jewish voting districts, and that are homes to those Jewish subpopulations that are a great deal more likely to support Republican policies and Republican candidates. A poll that excludes the most populous Jewish cities, and that excludes most Orthodox communities, is a poll that necessarily will reveal a distorted picture that privileges Jewish populations that tend to vote for Democrats.

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