What to Watch
November
16, 2020
We are 50 days from the two runoff elections in Georgia that
will decide which party holds the majority in the US Senate. We'll
continue to keep you informed on the stories and trends to watch. Let
us have your feedback at [email protected].
Jewish Activists Are
Fired Up for Georgia Runoffs
The Jerusalem Post reports:
Georgia is on everyone’s mind these days. The presidential election
is behind us, but the control of the Senate hinges on a couple of
runoffs in the Peach State after no candidate crossed the 50%
threshold on November 3.
…And with small margins between the candidates, the Jewish vote
could have an impact. There are about 120,000 Jews in the state of
Georgia, Dave Schechter, a veteran journalist who
covers the Jewish community in Georgia, told The Jerusalem
Post. He said the majority of voters live in the Atlanta area,
with a small concentration in Savannah.
“American Jews vote in a much higher percentage of the population
in general,” Schechter said. “So even in a general election, if 80% of
the Jews are voting or more, there are places in the United States
where they can have a great impact… When it comes to elections, Jews
punch over their weight,” Schechter noted. “They may not be a big
percentage, but their percentage in terms of voting makes them,
particularly in a runoff – where you may have a lower turnout – can
make them a critical constituency.”
Chuck Berk, co-chair of the Republican
Jewish Coalition of Atlanta, said support for Israel is a
crucial issue for the community. “When you have somebody who’s running
for the Senate who makes comments about how oppressive the Israelis
are and talks about things like the Israeli government has shot down
unarmed Palestinians, how do you vote for a guy like that?”
He anticipated a high turnout. “I think people understand how
important these two races are on both sides. I know that I’ve never
been contacted by so many people saying, ‘Hey, what can I do to help?
Who can I call? What can I do?’ So that’s very encouraging to
hear.
“People seem very energized because they know that we’ve got two
very good candidates and they’re very fearful of both of the
candidates on the other side, as well as what would happen if the
Republicans don’t maintain control of the Senate.”
The RJC is seeing that enthusiasm among our members. Our first
virtual Georgia Day of Action targeting Jewish voters was held
yesterday, and RJC volunteers made over 5,000 calls – with more Days
of Action scheduled this week! Click
here to sign up and help!
Note: Donation limits have reset for the
runoff. Individuals can give up to $2,800, and couples can give up to
$5,600 to each candidate, regardless of how much you gave during the
general election.
Loeffler’s Opponent Has
a History of Anti-Israel Comments
In December 2019, Kelly Loeffler was appointed to
the US Senate by Georgia Governor Brian Kemp, the
state's Republican governor, after Senator Johnny
Isakson resigned for health reasons. She is in a special
election to finish out the last two years of Isakson’s term. Her
Democrat opponent is Raphael Warnock, senior pastor
of the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, the congregation
Martin Luther King Jr. led in the 1960s.
In a 2018 sermon, Raphael Warnock criticized President
Donald Trump’s decision to move the US embassy in
Israel to Jerusalem. He
went on to say:
Meanwhile, young Palestinian sisters and brothers, who are
struggling for their very lives, struggling for water and struggling
for their human dignity, stood up in a non-violent protest, saying,
'If we’re going to die, we’re going to die struggling.' And yes, there
may have been some folk who were violent, but we oughta know how that
works out. We know what it’s like to stand up and have a peaceful
demonstration and have the media focus on a few violent uprisings. But
you have to look at those Palestinian sisters and brothers, who are
struggling for their human dignity and they have a right to
self-determination, they have a right to breathe free.
We need a two-state solution where all of God’s children can live
together… but we saw the government of Israel shoot down unarmed
Palestinian sisters and brothers like birds of prey. And I don’t care
who does it, it is wrong. It is wrong to shoot down God’s children
like they don’t matter at all. And it’s no more antisemitic for me to
say that than it is anti-white for me to say that Black lives matter.
Palestinian lives matter.
As the Jewish Insider points
out, the YouTube video of that sermon includes clips from RT, the
state-controlled Russian television outlet, that show images of
Palestinian rioters and Israeli soldiers clashing.
David Harsanyi writes
at National Review:
Warnock, senior pastor of the church once led by Reverend Martin
Luther King Jr., isn’t merely being “critical” of Israel, as his
defenders claim. Arguing that Israel hasn’t done enough to placate
Fatah is a criticism. Arguing that Israel’s refusal to return to 1967
boundaries is misguided is a criticism. Claiming that the Jewish state
goes around picking off God’s children as if "they don’t matter at
all" is a blood libel. It’s the kind of rhetoric that generates the
anti-Semitism unfortunately found in some corners of black
communities. It is also a complete fiction.
Warnock gave his sermon in the wake of Hamas’s 2018 attacks on the
Israeli border, ostensibly over the United States’ decision to move
its Israeli embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. But we know that to
identify this as an underlying reason is nonsense: Hamas doesn’t
recognize any capital of Israel — or even the nation’s existence, for
that matter. Hamas’s charter gives no indication that it aspires to a
two-state solution in which Jews and Arabs blissfully coexist, though
it does mention that "the Day of Judgment will not come about until
Moslems fight Jews and kill them."
Warnock signed a March 2019 letter criticizing Israel’s actions in
the West Bank, as the Washington Free Beacon reports:
[Warnock] attended a faith-group trip to Israel and Palestinian
Authority territory in February and March 2019. The group released the
letter shortly afterwards.
The letter claims that Israel's control of the West Bank has been
"borrowed and perfected from other previous oppressive regimes," that
the region's "ever-present physical walls" are "reminiscent of the
Berlin Wall," and that the "heavy militarization of the West Bank" is
reminiscent of "the military occupation of Namibia by apartheid South
Africa."
In an
editorial delivered to the Jewish Insider last week,
Warnock writes: “Without
reservation, you can count on me to stand with the Jewish community
and Israel in the US Senate.” That seems doubtful, given the
opinions he has expressed about Israel so many times before.
Update on House and Senate
Races
Several races that were still being counted and confirmed have
finally been decided, and Republicans have done well. The GOP picked
up three House seats: CA-48 (Michelle Steel), CA-39
(Young Kim), and NY-11 (Nicole
Malliotakis), and retained TX-24 (Beth Van
Duyne). Republicans also won the North Carolina (Thom
Tillis) and Alaska (Dan Sullivan) Senate
races.
We’re still waiting to hear the final results on these races: NY-7
(Tom Kean), CA-25 (Mike Garcia),
CA-21 (David Valadao), UT-4 (Burgess
Owens), and IA-2 (Mariannette Miller-Meeks),
as well as NY-2 (Andrew Garbarino) and NY-22
(Claudia Tenney), which are still being counted.
We’ll keep you updated as more information becomes available.
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