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News Reporter Rikki Schlott of The New York Post said:

With the 2024 election almost upon us, Donald Trump is gaining a new cohort of voters:
Jewish Americans who feel abandoned by the left.

According to exit polls, 77 percent of Jewish voters went for Biden in 2020.
But a recent poll from the Jewish Electoral Institute
found the president has lost 10 points on his lead against his rival.

Between college protests erupting into chants for an “intifada revolution,”
Democrats like Jamaal Bowman leaning hard into pro-Palestine messaging,
and progressive organizations like Black Lives Matter chapters celebrating
the October 7th terrorist attacks, many Jewish Americans feel abandoned by their party.

Some lifelong Jewish Democrats feel an explosion of left-wing antisemitism
has pushed them to re-register as Republicans — and vote for Trump.

The Post spoke to four local Jewish voters who made the switch in the wake of October 7th:

[1] Melissa Chapman always considered herself a bleeding heart liberal —
but she left the Democratic party after she claims it “betrayed” Jewish people.

“I’ve always been a Democrat, and I really believed that the Democrats were
going to protect me, because I’ve done everything a good Democrat should do,”
the 50-year-old Staten Islander told The Post.
“Then October 7th happened, and I was completely abandoned.”

Chapman, a mom of two, runs a blog where she champions progressive causes,
from LGBT rights and animal rights to Black History Month. However, after
the Hamas attacks which killed 1,200 and took another 250 hostages,
prompting Israel’s military to respond in Gaza, she found herself castigated
online in the progressive social media communities she’d long been a part of.

“Even on my vegan Facebook communities, all the recipes
became about freeing Palestine, somehow,” she said.
\“If you dissented in any way, you either got bullied,
shamed, or just kicked out of the group.
I was literally abandoned by every single
community that I poured my heart into.”

In total, Chapman was booted from 20 online communities
and called all manner of names, from ‘colonizer’ to ‘genocide supporter’ and ‘baby killer’.

“I was told to go back to Poland,” she recalled.
“One person told me they hope that I burn in the ovens.
If you support Israel, you’re immediately considered someone
who’s supporting genocide, which is not, by definition, even true
— but it doesn’t matter because buzzwords are taking over like wildfire.”

The experience of being squeezed out of progressive spaces
caused Chapman to re-register as a Republican.

“It’s a horrible time to support Israel and be a Democrat,
and I just don’t think there’s any space for us anymore,” she said.
“As a Jew, you have to disown Israel in order
to be accepted into the Democratic community.”

The post-October 7th reaction has caused Chapman to think
oftenof her late father, who was a Holocaust survivor:
“If he were alive today, I don’t know what he would say.
I don’t know, but would he say this is like
what happened in Germany before Hitler took over?”

As we head into election season, Chapman “1000%” plans
to vote Republican down the ticket,
from the local level to the presidential level.

“I never thought I would be voting Republican in my entire life,”
she said. “But it’s like living in a twilight zone. As a Jew living in America, I
don’t believe the Democratic Party has my best interest at heart.”

[2] After a lifetime as a Democrat, Danny Cohen
decided his party now “has a cancer” in the form of antisemitism.

“There’s been a hijacking of the Democratic Party,” Cohen,
56 of Brooklyn, told The Post. “Right now the Democratic Party has a cancer.
It seems like all the antisemitism is just coming out of the woodwork.”

In the wake of October 7th, Cohen changed his party registration to Republican.
“The response from the left really shook me to my core,”
Cohen, who was raised in a Syrian Jewish community in Brooklyn, said.

“I can’t be part of that party anymore. I don’t want
to have anything to do with these people.

As a Jewish person, Cohen says he feels uniquely unsupported by the left:
“It’s no longer a party that is fighting for human rights
because you can’t fight for human rights, except for Jewish rights.”

Over the past year, the standup comic says
left-wing antisemitism has been overwhelming.

“We have ‘The Squad.’ We see what’s going on in college campuses.
We see what’s going on during these protests.
It’s taking to the streets, and it’s getting crazy,” he said.

“I’m not saying that there isn’t any hate in the Republican party
— we have the KKK, the Proud Boys, Charlottesville — but they
can’t even hold a candle to the scale of what’s going on on the other side.”

Accordingly, Cohen is planning to vote Republican for the first time.

“I’m passionate. I’m excited about it, actually,” he said.
“It’s a fight against Jew hatred, and so now I’m excited about voting for Trump.”

[3] Sarah Sarkin once took to the streets to protest Trump’s election in 2016,
waving an “Anybody but Trump” poster. Now she’s voting for him in 2024.

“Being a mother and watching everything that happened in October [7, 2023]
made me make the switch,” Sarkin, who is raising her infant son in Syracuse, said.
“Those images are still seared and tattooed into my memory,
and it was just horrifying to see some of the reactions on the left.”

Although she considered herself “as Democrat as can be”
until recently, Sarkin, 31, re-registered as a Republican.

“It was a lot of silence on the left, and that really speaks so loudly
to how a party that I once thought was for equality and for
protecting us is really not for equal rights,” Sarkin told The Post.

“Being a liberal was such a big part of my identity,
so it was a weird thing for me to switch over.
But I’m at a different part of my life now,
and it’s time for me to change.”

After October 7th [2023], the safety of her family and Jewish community
became Sarkin’s number one priority, as a voter and as a mother.

Her local mom’s group chats were flooded with panicked posts
about safety, local protests, and whether or not to send kids
to school on the “International Day of Jihad,” called for
by an ex-Hamas leader on Oct. 13. Out of fear for their security,
Sarkin and her husband also decided to become first-time gun owners this year.

“I had never even held a gun, and it was scary, but we wanted
to learn how to protect ourselves,” Sarkin said.
“This became very real for us very soon.
It happened in Israel, but it can certainly happen here.”

As November nears, Sarkin plans to cast her ballot for Trump
because she believes his commitment to Israel is more resounding.

“At least for me, I need someone who’s a fighter and who knows where they stand.

[4] Marin Faiella: ‘I’ve never voted Republican before’

Marin Faiella has never voted Republican in her life,
but this November she’ll be casting her ballot for Trump.

“I think at the end of the day, it’s clear whose policies
are aligned with a safer, stronger allied relationship with Israel,”
she told The Post.

Faiella has always considered herself staunchly pro-choice
and generally progressive. But October 7th upended her priorities.

“My number one priority is overall safety and security
for myself as a Jewish person,” Faiella said.
“If your basic 101 safety isn’t in place,
then you can’t really advocate for any additional rights.”

Faiella, who lives in the West Village and works in real estate,
says pro-Palestine demonstrations in New York City have been a wake-up call.

“I saw what was on the streets — celebrations, people shouting
and dressed as terrorists here in New York City,” she recalled.
“After October 7th, I was just scared to death,
in terms of being a Jewish person in the city.”

The progressives’ reaction to October 7th inspired her
to change her registration from Democrat to Republican last November,
but she says “the writing has been on the wall.”

“There were plenty of warnings that were preludes to
what we’re seeing out in the open now, like Bella Hadid
and the woke crowd that have been all in on Free Palestine,”
Faiella said. Hadid is of Palestinian descent.

Although she was initially conflicted about re-registering
as a Republican, she is feeling confident in her choice.

“I’m not anti-Democrat, but I’m definitely anti-extreme Democrats,”
she said. “I continue to feel more and more confident and comfortable
in my skin and my new affiliation. I can always change back,
but this is where I feel it’s appropriate to be at this point in time.”

For Faiella, it all comes down to fundamental safety for the Jewish community.

“We could be Germany [in the] 1930s if we didn’t have
the government and law enforcement on our side,”
she warned. “If that ever changed, we wouldn’t be safe here anymore.”

SOURCE: article titled: “Meet the Jewish Americans
who feel abandoned by the Democrats, now voting Republican for the first time

by Rikki Schlott 2024 July 9, The New York Post, www (dot) NYPost (dot) org