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Sh’ma Blog: Confessions of a First Time American Jewish Voter

BY: JUAN MEJIA
My American soul is still in its infancy.  I have been living in this wonderful country for only six years.  This coming April I will celebrate one year of becoming a citizen. As far as being and feeling American, I am just but a baby.  I came to this [...]

Sh’ma Blog: On politics, shame and anger

BY: CARYN AVIV
“Shame is the work of memory against forgetting.  Shame is what we feel when we almost entirely – yet not entirely – forget social expectations and our obligations to others in favor of our immediate gratification….And nothing inspires as much shame as being a parent….The shame of parenthood – which is a good [...]

Jewish Issues, Jewish Votes

Mik Moore
In 2012, what will determine who Jews support and the intensity of that support? The key policy fights will be about the economy and job creation.

Stunning Stability: A Consistent Jewish Vote for 60 Years

Kenneth Wald
Assuming that Jewish political distinctiveness derives from certain intrinsic features of Jewish experience, scholars have offered three types of “Judaic” explanations: a “values” theory; a historical approach; and the “social marginality” thesis.

Corruption in the Political System

Russ Feingold
On January 21, 2010, the United States Supreme Court handed down one of the most lawless decisions in its history: Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission. In one fell swoop, the court overturned nearly 100 years of settled laws that had limited the ways that corporations could influence our democracy.

Winning the Hearts of L.A. Jewry

Rob Eshman

The race to replace Los Angeles’ termed-out Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa isn’t until March 2013, but already candidates are raising cash, taking meetings, and locking up supporters. I’ve run into City Controller Wendy Gruel at so many pro-Israel banquets, I figure she’s either seriously running for mayor, or she’s making aliyah. Turns out she’s [...]

Trends Among Young Jewish Voters

Aaron Strauss

In their guide “How to Mobilize Young Voters,” Rock the Vote (a nonprofit that engages and builds the political power of young people) states, “Young adults are more likely than older adults to identify as independent, a commonsense [sic] situation for a group of voters new to politics.” Young Jews, though, seem to [...]

The View from Pennsylvania: A Cloudy Crystal Ball

Betsy R. Sheerr

It is, of course, a fool’s errand to predict in November 2011 how President Barack Obama will fare with the Jewish vote in November 2012. With every election in recent memory, there have been dire predictions of the Jewish vote swinging more Republican, yet there has been minimal movement in that direction. [...]

The Tea Party and I: Confessions of a ‘Conservative’

Gary L. Greenberg

On November 9, 2011, Ohio voters rendered a split decision for the right and left. By an overwhelming majority (61 to 39 percent), they voted “no” on State Issue 2, thereby rejecting the public sector collective bargaining reform (“SB 5”) enacted by the Republican-controlled state legislature and signed by the Republican governor. [...]

The Jewish Vote in Presidential Elections

Jonathan D. Sarna

“The Jews… are numerous enough to defeat our ticket,” the editor of the Chicago Tribune warned in a private letter to an Illinois Congressman. The year was 1868 and Republicans worried that Jews would punish Ulysses S. Grant at the ballot box. Six years earlier, Grant had issued his infamous General Orders [...]

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