NPR: In new poll, Jewish voters express strong support for Biden on Israel

November 16, 2024


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Nearly three-quarters of Jewish Americans said they approve of President Biden’s response to Israel’s war against Hamas, in a  new survey  by the Jewish Electorate Institute, which calls itself “an independent, non-partisan organization dedicated to deepening the public’s understanding of Jewish American participation in our democracy.”

The survey of 800 Jewish voters was taken about a month after Hamas terrorist attacks against Israel left more than 1,200 people dead, according to the Israeli government. Israel has responded with attacks on Gaza that Palestinian officials say have killed more than 11,000 people.

Eighty percent of survey respondents also said they support a  proposal to send  more than $14 billion in U.S. military aid to Israel.

Some agreement across party lines, with a generation gap 

Halie Soifer, CEO of the Jewish Democratic Council of America, a pro-Israel group that supports Democrats, says Biden’s response to the war has garnered broad support from American Jews.

“Jewish voters are very supportive of the president’s policy as it relates to Israel and how he’s handling the war,” she explained. “And that appears to even supersede any partisan divides.”

While a strong majority of Jewish voters have  historically voted  for Democrats, Republican voters as a whole express  stronger support  for Israel. Republican presidential candidates have expressed staunch support for the war effort, including at the most recent  primary debate , which was co-hosted by the Republican Jewish Coalition. 

Soifer says support for Democrats remains strong despite what she called a “misconception…that somehow because Republicans have tried to politicize this, that Jewish voters may be leaving the Democratic Party or may be leaving their support of President Biden amid this crisis” – an idea she called “patently false.”

The survey also revealed a  significant generation gap  in support for Biden’s handling of the war. Voters over age 36 were far more supportive than younger voters, a trend that’s also been showing up in the U.S. population as a whole. 

Support for Biden, but not Netanyahu

Meanwhile, more than six in 10 Jewish voters expressed an unfavorable view of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose  approval ratings in Israel  have  also fallen  since the Hamas attack. Ninety-one percent also said they believe it’s possible to be “pro-Israel” while criticizing Israeli government policies.

The overwhelming majority of Jewish voters surveyed, 93 percent, said they’re worried about rising antisemitism, and  more respondents  said they trusted Biden and Democrats to fight antisemitism as compared with former President Donald Trump and Republicans. 

Meanwhile, an NPR/PBS  NewsHour/ Marist poll released this week shows that a  growing number  Americans – 38 % – believe Israel’s military response to the Hamas attack has been too much. Most of the growth in that number came from Democrats. In that survey, another 38% thought Israel’s response had been about right, and 17% said it was too little. 

December 15, 2025
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE December 15, 2025 Media Contact: Steve Rabinowitz press@jewishelectorateinstitute.org Jewish Electorate Institute Statement on Antisemitic Murders in Sydney, Australia Washington, D.C. - The Jewish Electorate Institute (JEI) mourns the victims, stands in solidarity with the Jewish community in Australia, and reaffirms our commitment to confronting antisemitism wherever it appears—through education, accountability, and collective moral clarity. JEI condemns in the strongest possible terms the antisemitic violence that led to the murders at Bondi Beach in Sydney. This horrific act is not only an attack on innocent lives, but an assault on the values of human dignity, pluralism, and safety that democratic societies depend upon. We remain committed to advancing civic engagement, democratic values, and accountability to ensure that antisemitism—wherever it emerges—is confronted early, forcefully, and without political qualification. Antisemitism—whether expressed through rhetoric, intimidation, or violence—has no place in civil society. When hatred is allowed to fester unchecked, it endangers not only Jewish communities but the broader social fabric that protects all minorities. As a nonpartisan organization committed to civic engagement and democratic norms, JEI calls on leaders, institutions, and communities across the political spectrum to speak out clearly and consistently against antisemitism and all forms of hate, and to take meaningful action to prevent violence before it occurs. Make our voices heard by urging elected officials, civic leaders, educators, faith communities, and civil society organizations to act with clarity and resolve. Condemn antisemitism unequivocally. Invest in education that confronts hatred and misinformation and strengthens protections for vulnerable communities. Reject the normalization of rhetoric that dehumanizes or incites violence. Silence and ambiguity enable hate to grow. Collective, principled action can stop it. We must take action now!
December 5, 2025
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE December 5, 2025 Media Contact: Steve Rabinowitz Bluelight Strategies steve@bluelightstrategies.com
December 1, 2025
JEI's work continues to be noted in national-level debates, and is proud to continue to be recognized in national media, including The New York Times this month. Our grassroots work is resonating in national-level policy conversations. As policy debates evolve, JEI remains committed to fostering informed civic engagement, interfaith dialogue, and community mobilization. "...Mr. Goldman and Mr. Espaillat also represent districts with substantial Jewish populations, according to research by the Jewish Electorate Institute . (Mr. Goldman’s district also includes large pockets of immigrant Muslim voters from Bangladesh and other countries.)" Continue to the article here