Posted on 01/01/2007 5:56:33 AM PST by gallaxyglue
Jews, Muslims, and the Democrats Gabriel Schoenfeld January 2007 The 2006 midterm elections confirmed once again a truism of American politics: American Jews remain overwhelmingly devoted to the Democratic party. According to exit polling, the tilt this year was, if anything, even more pronounced than it has been in the past. Some 88 percent of Jewish votes went to Democratic candidates, while a mere 12 percent went to the GOP.
Along with this lopsided outcome, a historical extreme, comes the news that the number of Jewish representatives in Congress has itself reached an all-time high. Although Jews represent a marginal slivera mere 2 percentof the U.S. population, they now hold 13 seats in the U.S. Senate, all but two of themArlen Specter of Pennsylvania and Norm Coleman of MinnesotaDemocratic. (Bernard Sanders of Vermont, elected as an independent, has pledged to vote with the Democratic caucus.) In the House of Representatives, Jews, all but one of them Democrats, now occupy 30 seats.
Party affiliation aside, this surely denotes a high-water mark of Jewish political representation, just as Joseph Liebermans presence on Al Gores presidential ticket set a previous mark in 2000. But party affiliation cannot be placed to one side. For the paradoxical and disturbing fact is that even as Jewish voters remain unwaveringly loyal to the Democrats, and even as Jewish representation in national office, almost entirely Democratic in color, has risen to an all-time high, the Democratic party itself is becoming demonstrably less hospitable to Jewish interests. Indeed, on at least one matter of central concernthe safety and security of the state of Israelthe party and the American Jewish community may be heading toward a slow-motion collision.
This development is not exactly of recent vintageits historical roots can be traced as far back as the late 1960sbut it has taken on an increasingly stark aspect as the party has progressively succumbed to the influence of its own left wing and to blind hatred of George W. Bush. And recently a new element has entered as well, symbolized by the election this past November of Keith Ellison, the first-ever Muslim member of the House of Representatives, on Minnesotas Democratic Farmer-Labor (DFL) ticket. Ellisons story is unique, but also a symptom of larger trends.
Louis Farrakhans First Congressman is how the Weekly Standard titled an election-eve profile of Ellison. In the late 1980s, while still a law student, Ellison had indeed been an activist in the Nation of Islam, Farrakhans black-Muslim cult. Writing under the pseudonyms of Keith Hakim, Keith X. Ellison, and Keith Ellison Muhammad, he called for the establishment of an independent black republic in the American South and defended the unadorned anti-Semitic pronouncements of Farrakhan and his organization. Long after completing law school, moreover, Ellison continued to work with the Nation of Islam, joining with more prominent black leaders, including the Reverend Jesse Jackson and the Reverend Al Sharpton, to help organize the 1995 Million Man March.
Ellison was carrying other baggage as well. Critics, particularly his Republican opponent, were quick to raise questions about his ties to the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), an organization that has been linked to radical Islamists and anti-Semites of various stripes.
But attempts to derail his candidacy on these grounds failed. Under fire during the campaign for his associations with the Nation of Islam, Ellison wrote a letter to the Minnesota Jewish community-relations council in which he admitted that as a young man he did not adequately scrutinize the positions and statements of the Nation of Islam, acknowledged that they were and are anti-Semitic, and declared that I should have come to that conclusion earlier than I did. On the strength of this and similar statements he proceeded to win endorsements from the American Jewish World, a progressive local paper, and the even more progressive Minneapolis Star Tribune, the latter of which dismissed criticism of his links to CAIR as a smear campaign.1
Both the ease with which Ellison was able to glide through this controversy and the remarkable lack of discomfort his candidacy appeared to cause among his fellow Democrats point to the larger significance of his election. For the simple fact is that in certain respects he is not alone: the past decade or so has seen the formation of a group of 40 to 50 Democratic Congressmen who, in varying degrees of intensity, have felt free to express an uninhibited hostility toward the Jewish state.
A coarse index of this groups membership was on display last May when Hamas, the Islamic fundamentalist terror organization pledged to Israels destruction, won elections in Gaza and the West Bank and assumed control of the Palestinian Authority. In response, Congress took up the Palestinian Anti-Terror Act of 2006legislation aimed at denying U.S. financial aid to the Palestinian Authority unless and until the President could certify that terror groups were not among its recipients, that the new Palestinian regime recognized Israels right to exist, and that it remained committed to agreements with Israel signed by its predecessors. The bill passed the Senate unanimously. In the House, a similar but slightly tougher version also passed handilybut not without drawing 37 nay votes and 9 votes of present only. Of the 46 representatives either actively opposing the bill or unwilling to vote for it, 41 were Democrats.
To be fair, not every Congressman who failed to support the legislation could automatically be counted as unsympathetic to Israel; the State Department had expressed its own reservations about the House version on the grounds that it unduly limited American flexibility. Still, the number of Democrats ready to oppose so straightforward an anti-terror measure was striking, and all the more so in light of the Democrats long record as the party friendlier to Israel than the Republicans.
What explains this turnabout? A full answer would take us on a sojourn through the twists and turns not only of party politics but of the ideological, cultural, and racial disputes of the past decades as they have affected both domestic and foreign policy. But of particular relevance in the present context is the demographic ingredient exemplified by Keith Ellison.
The Muslim population of the United States has been steadily growing. Although the numbers are hotly disputedthe U.S. census does not gather information about religious affiliationa middle-range estimate tells us there are four to six million Muslims in the country. Not in dispute is that they are one of the fastest growing segments of the U.S. population, and that with increasing size has come increasing potency within American political life.
Where populations are sufficiently concentrated in America, so too, usually, is political clout. As a rule Americas Muslims have settled in major citiesLos Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, and New Yorkwhere they are still too sparsely present to exercise significant weight as a bloc. Smaller localities, however, tell a different story. Thus, in Minneapolis-St. Paul, where many émigrés from strife-torn Somalia happen to have gathered, Muslims formed an important building block of Keith Ellisons electoral victory. In places like Dearborn and Detroit, Michigan, where many immigrants from the Arab world have settled, Muslims enjoy a far larger degree of political influence.
I work in internet marketing. A huge amount of work by Search
Engine Optimization types is devoted to becoming a "trusted source".
Once you become a trusted source for something you can sell just about anything related to it.
Commentary is not a "trusted source" for liberal jews in the way that NBC,CBS,ABC, NYTimes, Hollywood--are trusted sources.
These "untrusted sources" in Commentary are often policy insiders for the U.S Government. The government trusts them but their Jewish colleagues do not. Go figure.
That was pretty cold.
The simple way to say what I said above -- would be: "for reasons of their own -- liberal jews don't like republicans."
Agree. Also, the 88% is an exit poll used by the Democrats but not deemed reliable according to the Republican Jewish Coalition which represents over 25,000 dedicated conservatives. Its figure is 76%.
When a majority of Jews in that Minnesota congressional district vote for Keith Ellison, a Muslim, instead of the other candidate, who is a Jew, that is just a bit much to take. There is no hope for people who are that stupid.
Amen
High Volume. Articles on Israel can also be found by clicking on the Topic or Keyword Israel. or WOT [War on Terror]
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A large majority of German Jews acted in their best interests, they left Germany. Unfortunately some could find no where to go, and many were able only to flee to countries like France and Poland, which later fell.
Doesn't matter how they voted. Over 600,000 people live in the 5th district. There are only 40,000 or so Jews in the entire state. No way they could overcome the support for Ellison. A lousy 4,000 or so Muslims. Face it, if there's a religious connection to Ellison's election, which I doubt, it's the Christians.
You shouldn't. I hope you feel the same way about those Lutheran lutefiskers that elected him.
A large majority of German Jews acted in their best interests, they left Germany. Unfortunately some could find no where to go, and many were able only to flee to countries like France and Poland, which later fell.
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There is the famous story During WWII of the ship full of jewish refugees that came near the USA-- but was returned to Europe and its fate.
However, this was during FDR's democratic administration. So why don't the democrats get unending grief for this injustice.
I never smoke dope and post on Free Republic.
Because the story was the same everywhere, and across parties in the US. It's not like the Republicans (or anyone else) cared.
Because the story was the same everywhere, and across parties in the US. It's not like the Republicans (or anyone else) cared.
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Maybe, but democratic dominance in government during that period was pretty overwhelming. Of course it should be said for the democrats that they are mostly crosses at the military cemetary at Normandy.
Many did leave, but many did not since they thought "this couldn't be happening to ME." That is why--even in the face of continuing rumors about the dreadful fate that awaited them--they stayed within the "system." Too many packed cattle cars and too few Warsaw Ghetto Uprisings.
That's possible, but about 70% left, and plenty couldn't find a place to "leave" to. Personally, I've seen nothing to make me believe denial was a factor. And no, those who stayed didn't forsee that extermination was their ultimate fate. Germany was, after all, a civilized European nation.
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