The Forward: Jewish voters overwhelmingly approve Biden, new poll shows

July 13, 2021

By Jacob Kornbluh

Eight in 10 American Jews approve of President Biden’s performance during his first six months in office, according to a new poll published on Tuesday, and most support his management of the recent conflagration between Israel and Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip and the broader Mideast conflict.

The poll of 800 registered voters commissioned by GBAO Strategies for the non-partisan Jewish Electorate Institute showed that 74%of Jewish voters approve of the way Biden is handling the U.S.-Israel relationship and 62% support the way he managed the recent flare-up between Israel and Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip; 21% oppose the administration’s handling of that war.

At the same time, 61% support the two-state solution to the conflict, according to the poll, and 62% support the Biden administration’s restoration this spring of U.S. aid to the Palestinians that was cut by President Donald Trump.

And 9 in 10 of those polled are concerned about the rise of antisemitism in the U.S., though 38% feel safer as a Jewish person living in the U.S. since Biden became president. Asked about the origins of antisemitism, 61% said they are concerned about threats from the political right, and 22% from the left.

The survey was conducted between June 28 and July 1 via online and text-to-web with a margin of error of ±3.5%.

An  exit poll conducted by the same firm  for J Street suggested that Jewish voters supported Biden over former Trump 77% to 21% in the 2020 election. But  another exit poll , by the Associated Press, found that 68% of Jews voted for Biden and 30% for Trump, and yet another, sponsored by the Republican Jewish Coalition, put Jewish support for Biden at 60%.

Support for Biden on Israel issues appears to have risen considerably from  a pre-election survey  by the same Jewish Electoral Institute in which 46% of Jewish voters said they trusted Biden over Trump in handling U.S.-Israel relations.

Former President Barack Obama also enjoyed a high approval rating among Jews in his first year. A  Gallup poll  published in May of 2009 showed Obama with 79% approval. But that  dropped  to 66% in 2010 and 54% during his 2012 re-election campaign. Trump had a 21% approval and  77% disapproval rating  among Jewish voters during his first year as president, according to a survey conducted by the American Jewish Committee.

Overall, Biden is viewed favorably by 70% of Jewish voters, according to the new survey, 10 points lower than the 80% who approve of his performance so far; Trump’s favorability is at 18%. Reflecting the Democratic tilt of the Jewish-American electorate, the poll found only 10% have favorable views of the Republican congressional leaders, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy while Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi have favorability ratings above 50%.

Other highlights:

  • Biden’s job approval among Orthodox voters is at 31%, while 44% approve of his handling of U-S-Israel relations, and 37% were satisfied with his handling of the Israel-Gaza conflict.
  • 65% of Jewish Americans overall trust Biden to do a better job handling the Iranian threat than Trump did.
  • 61% of those polled identify themselves as Democrats, 17% as Republican and 22% as independent.
  • If the 2022 midterm elections were held now, these voters would support Democrats over Republicans 68% to 21%.
  • 83% are concerned about the laws recently passed in Florida and Georgia that restrict voter access.
  • 62% support eliminating the filibuster to pass voting-rights legislation in the Senate.
  • 62% feel emotionally attached to Israel and 87% think that someone can be critical of Israeli government policies and still be considered pro-Israel.
  • -71% believe U.S. aid to Israel is critical, yet 58% support restricting military aid to settlements in the occupied West Bank.
  • 30% think the new Israeli government headed by Naftali Bennett will strengthen relations between Israel and the U.S.; 62% say it will make no difference or are not sure.
By Eileen Filler-Corn July 3, 2025
In the nearly two years since Hamas’s brutal Oct. 7 attack on Israel, American Jews have watched a disturbing rise in antisemitism take place across America — and crucially, among some of our longtime allies. For decades, Jewish Americans stood at the forefront of progressive causes, marching for civil rights, fighting for reproductive freedom and advocating for immigrants and the marginalized. My Jewish faith is what first drove me to public service. The Jewish concept of tikkun olam — our responsibility to repair the world — is not just a religious tenet but a moral call to action. It’s why we’ve always shown up to defend others. Yet now, as antisemitism surges to record levels, many progressive organizations and leaders who once stood with us have gone quiet; or worse, turned their backs entirely. It’s no longer just about Israeli policy. The line between anti-Zionism and antisemitism has been crossed so many times it’s barely a line at all. “Zionist” has become a stand-in for “Jew,” and the message is clear: Unless you disavow the world’s only Jewish state, your place in many progressive spaces is no longer welcome. The picture is sobering. There have been calls to ban “Zionists” from Pride events. Many women’s groups have shrugged at Hamas’ rape of Israeli women. And the Democratic nominee for mayor of America’s most populous city has a pattern of antisemitic rhetoric and has refused to condemn the hurtful call to “globalize the intifada,” a rallying cry that has been used to incite violence against Jews. This didn’t happen overnight, but the silence from many who claim to fight for justice has been deafening and deeply painful. I know what it feels like to be targeted for who you are. In January 2020, shortly after I became the first woman and the first Jewish Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates, the FBI uncovered a plot to assassinate me. Two members of a neo-Nazi domestic terrorist group had targeted me. It was the most serious of many threats I received during my time as Speaker. Thankfully, law enforcement intervened in time. But the threat was real, and it reminded me that hatred knows no single party or ideology. We’ve long seen this kind of extremist hate on the right, but today that same danger is rising on both extremes of the ideological spectrum. Antisemitism spreads under different names but with the same devastating consequences. Now, with the recent war between Israel and Iran, we’re likely to see a fresh wave of anti-Zionism and antisemitism. It is already giving rise to a new round of dangerous conspiracy theories laced with antisemitic tropes: accusing American Jews of dual loyalty; suggesting we control foreign policy; and portraying Jewish political engagement as part of a shadowy cabal influencing Washington. This is a moment of moral testing. Will our leaders speak clearly and forcefully against antisemitism, even when it’s politically inconvenient? Will those who champion diversity and inclusion apply those values to Jews as well? And will we be honest about how bad actors have exploited division, stoked extremism and enabled those who traffic in hate? Just as many Americans oppose President Donald Trump’s leadership while still loving this country and believing in its promise, the same is true for Israel. You can criticize or reject Prime Minister Netanyahu’s government and still support Israel’s right to exist, to defend itself and to thrive as a Jewish and democratic state. That distinction matters. Criticizing a government is not the same as condemning a people; but when it comes to Israel, that line is too often deliberately blurred. We must be able to hold leaders accountable without fueling hatred or questioning a nation’s fundamental legitimacy. Antisemitism is not merely a problem faced by Jews — it is a bellwether for the health of our democracy. When a society tolerates hatred against one group, it gives license to hate others. When threats against public servants go unchallenged, violence becomes normalized. I was reminded of that tragic reality when my friend and former counterpart, former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman, was executed in her home along with her husband, Mark. Authorities say her killer was a politically motivated extremist who had compiled a list of Democratic lawmakers. Melissa was a principled leader and a friend. Her death was a heartbreaking loss and a flashing red warning sign for the tolerance of hate in our democracy. We cannot afford to treat this moment as normal. It is time for our allies to rejoin us. To speak up when we are threatened. To see antisemitism for what it is: a growing, dangerous force that must be confronted head-on. Because if we wait until it affects everyone, it will already be too late. Eileen Filler Corn is a JEI Board Member and Former Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates, and the only ever Jewish speaker in VA
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July 1, 2025
July 1, 2025 U.S. House Committee On The Judiciary 2142 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, DC 20515 Now in our ninth year, the nationally and internationally recognized Jewish Electorate Institute (JEI), an independent, non-partisan, non-profit organization, continues to serve as the barometer for the Jewish electorate. We are therefore honored to submit the following Comments for the Record to the U.S. House of Representatives’ Judiciary Committee in support of its June 24, 2025, hearing on antisemitism - Rising Threat: America’s Battle Against Antisemitic Terror. This hearing, punctuated by the moving testimony of Matt Nosanchuk, reminded us that Jewish safety in America is not a political football - it is a national imperative. Nosanchuk, a former senior official in both the Obama and Biden Administrations and a lifelong advocate against antisemitism, laid bare the stark realities we face. The murder of Sarah Milgrim and Yaron Lischinsky, who were attending a Jewish community event just blocks from his home, brought the crisis home - literally and painfully. It also underscored a chilling truth: this could have been any one of us. Antisemitism today does not discriminate based on geography, profession, or even political identity. Nosanchuk rightly challenged both ends of the political spectrum. From the right, we've seen rising indulgence of white nationalist rhetoric, normalization of Nazi imagery, and an embrace of conspiracy theorists. When antisemitism is tolerated—or worse, weaponized—by public officials and influential institutions, it emboldens violence and undermines the rule of law. The example of the pardoning of the person wearing a “Camp Auschwitz” shirt at the riot on the Capitol on January 6, 2021, was not just shocking to the Jewish community – it was symptomatic of a deeper, corrosive tolerance for hate. From the left, antisemitism also too often masquerades as political critique. When Jews are asked to renounce their ties to Israel to participate in coalitions, or when pro-Palestinian activism turns violent against Jews, with intimidating targeted rhetoric and violence, that’s not solidarity – it’s exclusion and scapegoating. Our Jewish identity should never be a precondition for political participation. What we need is not partisan grandstanding, but comprehensive action. That includes implementing the Biden Administration’s well-thought-out National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism, restoring funding for civil rights enforcement at the Justice Department, and condemning hate, regardless of its ideological source. Nosanchuk’s call for education, prevention, and cross-community solidarity is exactly right. In closing, it’s our view at JEI that using antisemitism as cover for draconian immigration or university policies erodes the democratic institutions that have allowed Jewish life to flourish. Fighting hate must not become an excuse to violate civil liberties - ours or anyone else’s. Our safety as Jews has always been linked to the safety of others. In this perilous moment, we must demand more than soundbites. We must demand seriousness, solidarity, and above all, solutions. We are grateful to the Committee for having held this vital hearing at a perilous moment for American Jews. Sincerely, Barbara Goldberg Goldman Chairperson The Jewish Electorate Institute
June 18, 2025
Washington, DC — As hostilities between Israel and Iran intensify, the Jewish Electorate Institute (JEI), a nonpartisan political nonprofit, is calling on Congress to take all necessary measures to support Israel’s security, halt Iran’s nuclear ambitions, and help bring the hostages home.