Posted on 08/13/2008 2:47:07 PM PDT by MeanWestTexan
As he works diligently on behalf of John McCain, Fred Zeidman expects the Arizona senator to break records.
I believe he is going to get unprecedented Jewish support, said the vice chair of Jewish outreach at the Republican National Committee. Hopefully, 40 percent.
If Jews do support the presumptive Republican candidate at that level, it would top the 24 percent of the Jewish vote George W. Bush received in 2004, not to mention the 39 percent that Ronald Reagan won in 1980.
Am I happy about this number? No, not necessarily, said Zeidman, a Houston venture capitalist and former top fund-raiser for President Bush in the Jewish community. But I think its a great number for our community.
Like NJ Obama advocate Doni Remba (see related story), Zeidman believes the key issue for Jews is his candidates stance on Israel.
The comparison between Sen. McCain and Sen. Obama is night and day. Do I know that Sen. Obama will be bad for Israel? I dont have any idea, and thats what concerns me, said Zeidman. I dont have any doubt on where John McCain stands.
In addition to his support for the GOP, Zeidman has been a leader of the Anti-Defamation Leagues Southwest Region, the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, the Jewish Federation of Greater Houston, and the American Jewish Committee.
He began a close relationship with Bush in the 1970s when we were single guys in Houston. We knew each other before we got into politics, he recalled in a telephone interview.
Zeidman helped Bushs successful campaign for Texas governor in 1994, then served as his director of Jewish outreach in two presidential campaigns.
This time he is sharing the stewardship of the RNCs 2008 Victory Jewish Coalition with Eric Cantor, the Jewish Republican congressman from Virginia who is reported to be on McCains short list of potential running mates.
Zeidman said he doesnt have any feel for whether Cantor would lure Jewish voters away from the Democrats.
Joe Lieberman proved that you dont win elections by putting someone who is Jewish on the ticket. Congressman Cantor has been a tremendous supporter of issues important to the Jewish community. But he is very conservative. Will people look at his conservative policies and not follow him? Could be.
And as optimistic as he may be about McCains chances, Zeidman said he is still realistic about the challenges Republicans face in trying to crack the hard core of Jewish loyalty to the Democrats.
A lot of the Jewish vote focuses on social issues which the Democrats have been much more in line with, he said. There has been this unwarranted fear of Republican administrations and who they might put in place to dictate on some of the social issues.
And, if Congress remains in Democratic hands, as he predicts (I wish it werent, he quickly added), then, he believes, a great system of checks and balances will allow Democrats to block much of a Republican presidents legislative agenda.
It is going to appear very unlikely that social issues that are truly feared by the bulk of the Jewish population would ever be implemented, he said.
Just like Israel shouldnt be the only issue, the Supreme Court and abortion shouldnt be the only issue. They are all important issues, and they all need to be weighed, he argued. Foreign policy, domestic policy, prayer in school all these things.
States in play Zeidmans admiration for McCain began in the early days of the current election cycle.
I was very close to three of the candidates Mitt Romney, Rudolph Giuliani, and John McCain, he said. I had always felt that I could have supported any one of them, but McCain was the most prepared and most experienced to be president. As strongly as I believe the other two men were firm in their support of Israel, the only man with a 20-year documented history was McCain.
Our focus is on states that are in play Florida, Ohio, Michigan, Zeidman said. I think every Jew in America needs to hear John McCains message. I know New Jersey pretty well, and I would love to think McCain has a chance there. But you have a heavily Democratic state, historically.
Does Obamas being black make a difference to Jewish voters?
I cant really speak to that, he said. I would love to think that in America it wouldnt. Do I believe, as a realist, do I think we are a race-free nation? Not at all. Do I think it affects the election? Sure positively and negatively, he said, predicting that Obamas candidacy will bring unprecedented numbers of African-Americans to the polls. But Ive got to believe, unfortunately, there are people in this country to whom race would matter.
Zeidman, a senior director of governmental affairs at the Washington, DC, lobbying firm of Greenberg Traurig, disputes the Democrats contention that McCains election would be tantamount to a third term for President Bush.
I dont see McCain being labeled as Bush Three, he said. To the extent that the agenda of the president has been successful and Sen. McCain is following him in those footsteps, he is following the right thing.
Not suprising, from all the hate we see on the Obama maintained blog.
Not suprising, from all the hate we see on the Obama maintained blog.
In big cities, “Stockholm Syndrome”..
1. Harry Truman, 1947, first to recognize State of Israel.
2. Liberal Jews, mostly reform, are, well, liberal.
3. Liberal Jews are to the left on defense issues too, including those of Israel, and are the peace contingent in Israeli politics.
But even the liberal Israelis understand what Iran intends.
Louis Farrakhan and Obama have past ties, Obama having attended the Million Man March.
Jeremiah Wright’s church bulletin carried Farrakhanian writings.
Jews understand what Farrakhan is, I hope in sufficient numbers to put Florida in McCain’s column.
A larger percentage of Jews will vote McCain but the stupid American Jews will still vote for the only candidate who sides with the mooselimbs on the Israel deal, Obamma Lamma Heusein .
I just cant understand why Jews would back Democrats in the first place.”
An entire generation of baby boomers’ parents idolized FDR.
Then, many of their baby boomer kids went to college during the 60s-70s social revolution. That’s a lot of indoctrination to overcome.
But now, they should know better.
There are still enough jews that would vote for the “d” even if the candidate’s name was Hitler.
Why Jews vote liberal, in no particular order, some stronger than others:
1. Historical accident: still voting for FDR
2. Urban dwellers (voting patterns no differnt than urban Roman Catholics, for example)
3. The Christian theocrat wing of the Republican party (think The Huckster) scares them to death (sacres me, too. The Huckster wanted to bring back Prohibition.)
4. Pat “Hitler was robbed” Buchanon is the TV face of the Republican party and James “Fuck the Jews” Buchanon is a recent memory
5. Jews (or at least me) were taught that charity is not really charity, it’s wealth that was improperly distributed and there is a duty to get it where it is supposed to go. Ergo, they are suckers for arguments in favor of government-give-away programs.
6. Socialism kinda works if the people are self-motivated and intelligent with family pressure to succeed. Jewish culture is such that free-riders are reasonably uncommon (my no-good nephew being the exception). They assume other people are like them.
7. Legalistic by training, with a strong sense that some codification (regulations!) is the way to run things — ‘cause, after all that’s how G-d did it.
8. Liberal Reform Judaism -— in contrast to the actual religion practised by someone who reads the Torah -— is a social movement defined as being the dissenting voice against mainstream Christianity (and more lately against Orthodox Judaism). Serious Christians are Republicans, ergo Republicans are bad.
Huh? Of course putting him on the ticket as a candidate for the party that always gets the jewish vote anyway didn't help. But that doesn't mean he won't bring jewish votes over to the Republican ticket.
As noted in other threads, the McCain Kippah is outselling the Obama Kippah 55% to 45% (or so). Normally, it’s 70/30 in favor of the Dhim.
Call it the kippah in-trade market.
Yeah, that didn’t make any sense to me, either.
Thanks for posting that!
And a big percentage of American Jews are secular. Secular Jews vote just like secular Americans...liberal.
Stop the tape!
Is he saying that it's unfortunate that racist considerations will result in an increase in the number of AAs who will vote?
Well, he didn’t say THAT. He was talking about people NOT voting for Obama because of race -— while tied to the positive statement that AA would vote for Obama in record numbers.
It was a very clever indirect statement.
I was pointing out the correct interpretation of his data.
This is barely news worth reporting. “Record” votes for a Republican amounts to a handful more, in the end.
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