Why Obama’s Jewish support is slipping
By RAFAEL MEDOFF
06/17/2012 21:50
Look no further than the president’s meeting last week with a delegation of Jewish leaders.
President Peres, US President Obama toast Photo: Amos Ben Gershom/ GPO
Anyone wondering why President Barack Obama’s 30-point lead over Mitt Romney
among Jews in New York has shrunk to just eight points need look no further than
the president’s meeting last week with a delegation of Jewish
leaders.
According to the latest survey by the Siena College Research
Institute, one of the top polling agencies covering New York State, Obama’s
previous 62-32 edge over Romney among the state’s Jewish voters has dwindled to
51-43. That’s the lowest Jewish support for a Democratic presidential candidate
since Jimmy Carter in 1980.
A few days before the poll came out, a
delegation of Orthodox Jewish leaders met with the president at the White House.
In a memo to his congregants this week, Rabbi Dr. Haskel Lookstein of
Manhattan’s Kehilath Jeshurun synagogue described the meeting.
“When
asked about the perception that Israel is being pressed on the peace process
more than are the Palestinians,” Rabbi Lookstein wrote, “the President indicated
his belief that both sides need to compromise and that he has pressured both
sides. However, in truth, he only cited pressure on the Israelis with
respect to stopping settlement activity. He indicated that all of the
United States assistance to Israel on security issues is problematic for the
Palestinians, but, of course, that doesn’t constitute pressure on them to do
anything. The one thing the Palestinians have to be pressured to do is to sit
down at the table and negotiate without preconditions. The President has
not done this and he avoided giving a clear response to the question of how he
is specifically pressuring the Palestinians.”
Although the president and
his advisers had plenty of time to prepare for the meeting, and even though the
meeting was, as Rabbi Lookstein put it, “carefully scripted,” President Obama
“avoided giving a clear response” regarding pressuring the Palestinians. One
would think he would have come up with at least one example, even if it was more
rhetorical than substantive, to soothe the concerns of the Jewish delegation. No
such luck.
Rabbi Lookstein, the author of Were We Our Brothers’ Keepers?,
an important book on American Jewry’s response to the Holocaust, has a keen
sense of history. He recalled, in his memo, how some prominent Jews with access
to President Franklin Roosevelt hesitated “to ask the hard questions or raise
the tough issues.”
In December 1942, after the US had verified that mass
murder of Europe’s Jews was underway, Jewish leaders were granted half an hour
with the president. He spent the first 23 minutes telling jokes and commenting
on other subjects. Then FDR spoke in generalities about the Nazi genocide for a
few moments. And then – one participant later wrote – he “pushed some secret
button, and his adjutant appeared in the room” to usher the Jewish leaders
out.
In his diary, Roosevelt’s vice president, Henry Wallace, wrote about
an incident in March 1944, in which FDR met with Jewish leaders and “caused
[them] to believe that he was in complete accord with them...” The very next
day, Roosevelt boasted to his cabinet that he had told the Jewish leaders “where
to get off” and had warned them that their agitation for Zionism was “going to
be responsible for the killing of a hundred thousand people.” “Enraged Arabs”
would retaliate by attacking Americans in the Middle East, FDR
claimed.
“The President certainly is a waterman,” Wallace wrote. “He
looks one direction and rows the other with the utmost skill.”
American
Jews in the 1940s had no way to know President Roosevelt’s true feelings on
these issues, and Jewish leaders were reluctant to speak up. “Thank God,
we live in a very different world today,” Rabbi Lookstein wrote this week.
Today’s Jewish leaders are much more willing than their predecessors to ask the
president the difficult questions that need to be asked.
At the end of
the meeting with President Obama, Rabbi Lookstein gave the president’s Jewish
chief of staff, Jack Lew, a copy of his book, which he inscribed, “May you,
unlike American Jewish leaders during the Holocaust, speak truth to power when
the opportunity presents itself.”
“My only question,” Rabbi Lookstein
concluded, is “will the President listen? I hope the answer to that is
yes.”
I hope so, too. But unfortunately, so far President Obama evidently
prefers to “avoid giving a clear response” regarding pressuring the
Palestinians. If that continues to be his policy, then the president may
well find his Jewish support decreasing even further.
The writer is
director of The David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies, and coauthor,
with Prof. Sonja Schoepf Wentling, of the forthcoming book Herbert Hoover
and the Jews: The Origins of the “Jewish Vote” and Bipartisan Support for
Israel.