HolyCoast: Jewish Voters Will Not Follow Obama
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Monday, March 03, 2008

Jewish Voters Will Not Follow Obama

There's a warning today from a Brooklyn assemblyman that should Barack Obama win the nomination, he shouldn't expect much if any support from the Jewish community:
March 3, 2008 -- BROOKLYN Assemblyman Dov Hikind yesterday predicted that Jewish voters would make "a mass movement toward Sen. McCain" if Barack Obama knocks Hillary Rodham Clinton out of the race in tomorrow's critical Democratic primaries.

Hikind, an Orthodox Jew whose Borough Park district includes the largest Hasidic bloc in the United States, blasted Obama for what he called his half-hearted support of Israel and his ties to the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr., who has repeatedly praised anti-Semitic Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, who has endorsed Obama.

Hikind, a Democrat who has yet to endorse a candidate for president, said Obama had not satisfactorily distanced himself from Wright, his Chicago-based personal pastor, noting, "This is a man who thinks Farrakhan is a great guy and God's gift to the world."

Hikind went on, "Obama has said that you can be a supporter of Israel even if you're for giving up land to the Arabs, which is true - but for a guy running for president to take a position like this in advance of getting into office, combined with everything else going on in the Middle East, that scares the hell out of me.

"There are a hell of a lot of Jews who are concerned about these issues, and they go way beyond Hasidic and Orthodox Jews, people I describe as conservative Reagan/Giuliani Democrats," said Hikind, who backed Ronald Reagan's presidential campaigns in 1980 and 1984.

Hikind's warning about Jewish concerns over Obama are being widely but privately voiced among top New York Democrats.

Obama will also have trouble with the true believer feminists who will never forgive teh Dem party for rejecting their savior. As mentioned here before the Dem party is a collection of special interests and they will be anything but united when the nomination battle is finally over.

UPDATE: A new Pew poll suggests that Jewish and feminist voters aren't Obama's only concerns come Novembers:
A quarter of Democrats (25%) who back Clinton for the nomination say they would favor McCain in a general election test against Obama. The "defection" rate among Obama's supporters if Clinton wins the nomination is far lower; just 10% say they would vote for McCain in November, while 86% say they would back Clinton.


Could this help sway the superdelegates back to Hillary?

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