The Jerusalem Post

UTJ tracks every last haredi voter

- • By JEREMY SHARON

The ultra-Orthodox United Torah Judaism Party ran a getout-the-vote campaign on Tuesday, which was staggering in its level of detail and its ability to track every last voter in the haredi community.

More than 4,000 volunteers for the party across the country are part of this gargantuan effort to reach every ultra-Orthodox voter and make sure he or she has voted.

Members of the community who have not voted will receive phone calls from members of the campaign team urging them to go vote. A campaign staffer estimated that they would reach 98% of all voters in the haredi sector during the course of the day.

At the UTJ campaign headquarte­rs for the Jerusalem region, campaign staff explained to The Jerusalem Post how the system works.

Community election managers operate in every synagogue of every ultra-Orthodox community around the country, collecting the voting numbers of every eligible voter in the community.

On Election Day itself, polling station observers from UTJ report electronic­ally in real time every individual who comes to vote, identifyin­g them by their voting number, and those reports go through to a central system that can record the voter turnout for every community.

So as of 10 a.m., the system showed that members of the Gur community were leading voter turnout in the hassidic sector with 26% having voted; the Slonim community was at 18% and Chabad was in last place at 6%.

According to the UTJ director of the communitie­s’ desk for the Jerusalem sector, volunteers at the campaign headquarte­rs would start calling community members who had yet to vote already beginning at 10 a.m.

UTJ has designated callers for each particular community, with more assigned to the bigger communitie­s such as Gur and Viznitz, and less to the smaller ones.

Ultra-Orthodox voters who had not yet voted will first get a call from a member of the campaign team assigned to their community asking them to go vote.

Should they still fail to vote, those voters will receive calls from their community election manager or even their communal rabbi telling them of the imperative to vote for the ultra-Orthodox parties.

Tracking in the hassidic communitie­s is easier than in the non-hassidic “Litvak” communitie­s, given their tight-knit, concentrat­ed nature, with tracking done through synagogues on a geographic basis.

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