Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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Speaker 1 (00:22):
Today's Q and A are Jewish voters, clean Democrats for
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(01:05):
for a future Q and A. Today's note is this
Brian with the Democratic Party turned to pro Gaza pro
hamas anti Semitic and anti Israel are Jewish people leaving
the Democratic Party always listening, keep up the great work,
Appreciate that, appreciate that. And so yeah, I mean every
time you turn around, there's something else right in terms
(01:27):
of anti Semitism that's out there. I mean, and kind
of like the exclamation point on this is the Democrat
primary winner for the mayoral race in New York last week,
where you have somebody who is an anti semi socialist
who is the Democrats candidate now and makes it increasingly
(01:47):
hard for the Democrat Party to say, hey, this isn't
who we are. And speaking about anti Semitism, just kind
of the rise of it on the left generally. I mean,
this is something that ended up drawing a lot of
attention over the weekend in England. I mean, just horrible.
What's in this The.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
Duo bomb villain led crowds on Saturday in chants such
as free, Free Palestine.
Speaker 1 (02:10):
And then this theft to the ID theft to the
ID to the ID, theft to the IDF.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
Local police say they'll review video evidence to determine whether
any offenses may have been committed that would require a
criminal And.
Speaker 1 (02:30):
Yeah, so that happened in the country where people have
been arrested for praying silently in front of a portion clinics.
So I'm just death to the IDF and then the
sick evans that are actually chanting in the crowd too.
But nevertheless, yeah, I mean, look, it is a type
for choosing, right, It really is a type of choosing
We see this everywhere and around the world, and it
(02:51):
is clear that in this country the home of anti
Semitism is the Democrat Party. There are two sides of stories,
one side of facts. That's a fact because every elected
Democrat has anti Semites in their ranks. And even if
they're not they do you hear them speak it out?
Do you hear them saying there's no place in this
party for people who are anti Semitic. You certainly do not.
(03:16):
So the Democrat Party. You are right in your line
of thought and your assertion here. The Democrat Party is
the home for anti Semitism in the United States of America.
So it would be natural that people that I don't know,
anti Semites might want potentially dead, might not want to
(03:39):
be part of the party anymore. Probably a good idea
to get out of it. Actually, so a couple things
that are interesting. On this note, it just so happens
that a few days ago we receive the most comprehensive
study of voter patterns that are conducted every four years.
It's the Pew Research Center Study of What happened Voter
(04:02):
pattern changes and Trends. And as it is explained by Pew,
they say, this Pew Research Center analysis examines voter turnout
and voting preferences in the twenty twenty four presidential election
through the lens of validated voters. Validated voters are adult
citizens who told us that they voted in a post
(04:22):
election survey and have a record showing they voted in
their state's official voter turnout records. Okay, so this study
is effectively the trust but verify research study of changing
voter trends and the only one of its kind at
a national scale. And the headline to Pew's study didn't
(04:43):
say at all, but it said a lot. The headline
behind Trump's twenty twenty four victory a more racially and
ethnically diverse voter coalition. Now, it already was evident that the
President Trump at the biggest coalition of voters, effectively the
most diverse base of support that any president has had
an many years, potentially decades. I've taken the findings from
(05:04):
few and also added historical contacts for win a Republican
presidential candidate performed as well with each demographic here. So
it started with Asian voters. Trump improved his voter share
of Asian voters to thirty five percent. That was up
eight points from the previous presidential election. It was the
highest vote chair of the Asian vote a Republican presidential
(05:27):
candidate had since George W. Bush in two thousand. Among
Black voters, Trump's support up to fifteen percent last year.
That was a three percent increase over the prior cycle.
It was the highest share of the Black vote won
by a Republican presidential candidate since Richard Nixon in nineteen sixty,
(05:50):
not even one of the elections he won, but back
against jfkn sixty. Hispanic voters, Trump significantly improved his support there.
Forty five percent of Hispanic voters back Trump. That was
up seven points from the prior election. It was the
highest share of the Hispanic vote won by a Republican
presidential candidate since Richard Nixon in nineteen seventy two white voters,
(06:17):
Trump's support was at seventy eight percent. That was actually
down ten points from when he won in twenty sixteen.
And again that is in part the changer you've seen,
for example, like white elitist leftists that have trended that
you know, further further left, especially women, and you have
minority groups that have been breaking towards the right. You
(06:38):
take a look at men overall, Trump won fifty five
percent of men, That was up five points from the
previous cycle and the highest percentage of men won by
a Republican since Bush in two thousand and four. And similarly, women,
Trump won forty six percent of women, that was up
two points, the highest percentage of the email vote since
(07:01):
Bush in two thousand and four. So this type of info,
I think is particularly important because the survey divide in
pulling between adults for example, or the widest samples that
exist and those of likely voters, has never been wider.
For example, President Trump's current average approval rating in adult
(07:21):
sampled surveys is only forty one percent. Right now, if
you take a look at just the likely voter surveys,
his approval writing stands at fifty three percent, the highest
he's ever had. So with all of this said, you
might have noticed I still didn't answer your question about Jews.
That's because I thought the Pew info was interesting and
(07:43):
it's new, but they don't do extensive religious breakouts in
that study. So about that. The most comprehensive analysis of
Jewish voting trends that we've had in recent history was
a nationwide study of Jewish voters conducted by the American
Jewish Committee last year. Now this was prior to the
(08:03):
presidential election. In the survey, thirty one percent of Jewish
voters identified as Republicans. That was the highest percentage ever recorded,
close to double the sixteen percent historic average in that survey,
So effectively, support Republican support by Jews has doubled over
(08:28):
where it used to be. And given that it took
place over a year ago that survey, you got to imagine,
given everything that's happened in world events, the trend wouldn't
be going the other way. And just to kind of
put a fine point on it with a local anecdote, locally,
President Trump won Boca by two hundred and eight votes.
(08:50):
In twenty sixteen, he carried Boca by six thousand, seven
hundred and fifty eight voters last year. So that monumental
shift in the largest Jewish Committee community per capita in
South Florida, I think speaks to the larger trends that
we're seeing across the country