由买买提看人间百态

boards

本页内容为未名空间相应帖子的节选和存档,一周内的贴子最多显示50字,超过一周显示500字 访问原贴
USANews版 - 立场左倾的犹太人对共和党的支持率从22%上升到32%
相关主题
华人在以色列被禁止交配 (转载)共和党建制派支持以色列有情可原,床粉不应该呀
More reasons for Jews to vote Republican, or at least not DemocratTrump invents new government post for his friend
Romney Is Right About the PalestiniansThe Reality of Jerusalem
以色列对加沙派出地面部队了soros今天估计又花了几十米
巴解申请加入国际犯罪法庭, 然后加入后就被以色列告了哈马斯恐怖头子说基地恐怖头子本-拉登是“殉道士”“圣斗士”
巴勒斯坦用刀捅人的恐怖事件的6个教训29次起立鼓掌,以色列总理内塔尼亚胡在美国国会演讲
SANDERS以色列政策Romney in Israel
巴马牛啊,最后时刻在UN捅了以色列一刀CNN是撒谎老手了
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: street话题: jewish话题: israel话题: soros话题: brooks
进入USANews版参与讨论
1 (共1页)
l****z
发帖数: 29846
1
Jewish Support of the GOP Surges
Friday, 07 Dec 2012 04:08 PM
By Ronald Kessler
Ronald Kessler reporting from Washington, D.C. — The Republican share of
the Jewish vote jumped nationally in the presidential election from 22
percent to 32 percent, an increase of almost 50 percent, Matt Brooks,
executive director of the Republican Jewish Coalition, tells Newsmax.
Based on an exit poll of 1,000 Jewish voters commissioned by the group,
Brooks says the results show that Republicans have gained market share among
Jewish voters in five of the last six national elections. The 10-point gain
in the last election is the largest since 1972.
Brooks takes issue with a poll commissioned by the left-leaning, pro-Israel
organization J Street. That poll found that President Barack Obama received
70 percent of the Jewish vote, in line with an average of 70 percent
received by Democratic candidates since exit polling began in 1972. As noted
in my story Israel Not a Priority for Jewish Voters, the J Street poll also
reported that Jewish voters in the last election cared far more about the
economy and healthcare than policies toward Israel.
While Brooks agrees that Israel is not among the top one or two issues that
matter most to Jewish voters, the RJC poll found that Israel is important to
them. But as Americans, Jews understandably care most about issues that
directly affect all Americans, he says.
“If you ask voters what are the two most important issues, of course Israel
is not going to be at the top,” Brooks says. “People are concerned about
the economy, they are concerned about jobs, they are concerned about the
debt and deficit. Israel and the Jewish community are clearly threshold
issues. They are important to people in terms of looking at the respective
candidates in terms of whom they are going to support.”
The RJC poll asked Jewish voters how their feelings about policies toward
Israel helped determine their votes. More than 75 percent of the respondents
said they were important. But 44.5 percent of the Jewish voters polled said
they considered President Obama more pro-Israeli than pro-Palestinian. A
total of 22.8 percent said he was more pro-Palestinian, and 17.4 percent
considered him to be neutral.
Noting that the sample for the RJC poll of 1,000 Jewish voters was 25
percent larger than for J Street’s poll, Brooks says, “Basically, J Street
is sort of a left-wing organization which has a particular agenda with
regards to Israel and a vested interest in trying to sort of minimize in the
minds of people the issue of Israel as a relevant political subject. I
think they got the results that they wanted by the way they asked the
questions.”
In 2010, J Street’s website suggested that the organization had received no
funding from George Soros, the left-wing activist. But confidential tax
records mistakenly made public by the Internal Revenue Service showed that
Soros and his family had contributed $245,000 to J Street in 2008. At the
time, J Street President Jeremy Ben-Ami acknowledged that the group had
received $500,000 more since then as part of a three-year gift, according to
the Washington Post.
After the report on the contributions was published, Ben-Ami apologized on
the group’s website for being “less than clear” about Soros’ support.
“I said Mr. Soros did not help launch J Street or provide its initial
funding, and that is true,” Ben-Ami wrote. “I also said we would be happy
to take his support. But I did not go the extra step to add that he did in
fact start providing support in the fall of 2008, six months after our
launch.”
Yet the same claim that Ben-Ami described in 2010 as being “less than clear
” continues to appear on the J Street website under the title “George
Soros did not found J Street.”
“Fact,” the statement now on the J Street website says. “George Soros did
not found J Street. In fact, George Soros very publicly stated his decision
not to be engaged in J Street when it was launched —precisely out of fear
that his involvement would be used against the organization.”
J Street spokesmen had no immediate comment.
“Israel might not be the No. 1 issue, and it might not be the No. 2 issue,
but it’s an important issue, and I think that’s the crux of the
fundamental difference between the analysis of our poll and what the J
Street people wanted,” Brooks says.
“I think it was one of the key reasons, along with the economy and other
issues, that we had such a huge increase in the Jewish vote for Mitt Romney
and the Republicans, versus where we were in 2008. You would have to go back
to 1972 to see a comparable one-election shift in the Jewish vote.”
Ronald Kessler is chief Washington correspondent of Newsmax.com. He is the
New York Times bestselling author of books on the Secret Service, FBI, and
CIA. Read more reports from Ronald Kessler
1 (共1页)
进入USANews版参与讨论
相关主题
CNN是撒谎老手了巴解申请加入国际犯罪法庭, 然后加入后就被以色列告了
Great News: Obama Finally Gets Back to Fundraising Tonight巴勒斯坦用刀捅人的恐怖事件的6个教训
UN说不是伊朗,北朝鲜和叙利亚,而是以色列人权最差SANDERS以色列政策
西班牙拒绝一犹太人参加音乐会,现在又反悔巴马牛啊,最后时刻在UN捅了以色列一刀
华人在以色列被禁止交配 (转载)共和党建制派支持以色列有情可原,床粉不应该呀
More reasons for Jews to vote Republican, or at least not DemocratTrump invents new government post for his friend
Romney Is Right About the PalestiniansThe Reality of Jerusalem
以色列对加沙派出地面部队了soros今天估计又花了几十米
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: street话题: jewish话题: israel话题: soros话题: brooks