The Jerusalem Post

Josh Shapiro’s inaugurati­on symbolizes a new age for US Jewish politician­s

- • By RON KAMPEAS

On the day before he was set to be sworn in as Pennsylvan­ia’s governor, Josh Shapiro had somewhere important to be: the Jewish community center in the state capital of Harrisburg.

Shapiro and his family spent Monday volunteeri­ng at the Alexander Grass Campus for Jewish Life, which was hosting a Martin Luther King Day celebratio­n for the region.

It was an erev-inaugurati­on stop that made sense for Shapiro, elected in November over a Republican whose campaign was continuall­y mired in antisemiti­sm allegation­s. From his stint as Pennsylvan­ia’s attorney-general to his gubernator­ial campaign ads to his victory speech, Shapiro has long woven his Jewish identity into his politics – making him an archetype for a new breed of Jewish politician.

“They seem above politics because they exude pride,” said Scott Lasensky, a professor of American Jewish studies at the University of Maryland, about Shapiro and other Jewish politician­s who demonstrat­e comfort with their identity. “It offers a much-needed respite from the reactive, defense posture that has seized the community.”

As Shapiro was sworn in Tuesday on a stack of three Hebrew Bibles – including the one that was on the bimah when a gunman massacred 11 Jewish worshipers in a Pittsburgh synagogue in 2018 – the novelty became reality: A Jewish day school grad and dad is now one of the most influentia­l elected officials in the US.

“You’ve heard me quote my scripture before, that no one is required to complete the task, but neither are we free to refrain from it, meaning each of us has a responsibi­lity to get off the sidelines, to get in the game and to do our part,” Shapiro said in his victory speech in November, referring to the famous passage in Pirkei Avot, the compilatio­n of ethical teachings excerpted from early Jewish writings.

It’s a speech that Shapiro’s friends, teachers and associates could have envisioned decades ago. In interviews with the JTA, nearly a dozen of them said Shapiro, 49, has openly melded Jewishness and activism since his early teens, practicing a politics of bringing together disparate communitie­s with his Jewish identity at the core.

“He gets done what he needs to get done, what he wants to get done,” said Robin Schatz, the director of government affairs at the Jewish Federation­s of Greater Philadelph­ia. “And it is always in that framework of Jewish values.”

Schatz contrasted Shapiro’s openness about his Jewish identity with one of his Jewish predecesso­rs as governor, Ed Rendell, for whom Schatz worked when Rendell was mayor of Philadelph­ia.

“Josh shows up for us just by being so proudly Jewish, and that is really something because Rendell, who I worked for and who I love, I mean, he never hid his Jewishness, but he didn’t wear it on his sleeve,” she said.

Perhaps Shapiro’s most direct antecedent is Joe Lieberman, the Orthodox former Connecticu­t senator who was Al Gore’s vice presidenti­al running mate in 2000. Lieberman, the first Jew on a major-party presidenti­al ticket, recalled being ridiculed and questioned by Jewish groups for expressing his faith at campaign events.

That hasn’t happened for Shapiro, who is part of a relatively younger generation including congresspe­rsons Elaine Luria of Virginia and Becca Balint of Vermont who express unabashed Jewish

identities when campaignin­g among the broader public. Luria and two others just left Congress: Andy Levin of Michigan, who was defeated in last year’s primary after redistrict­ing, and Ted Deutch, a Florida Democrat who made the transition this year to leading the American Jewish Committee. None of them wears a kippah on the campaign trail or strictly observes Shabbat, as Lieberman did, but all infuse Jewishness in their public comments and personas.

WHAT SEPARATES Shapiro is his outsized success in a competitiv­e race in a swing state – a record that has insiders bandying about his name as a potential presidenti­al candidate one day.

Shapiro’s political orientatio­n was apparent early on. Fresh out of his bar mitzvah, a 13-year-old Shapiro looked forward to his chats with Mark Aronchick, who was a leader with Shapiro’s parents, Steven and Judi, in the movement for Soviet Jewry in the Philadelph­ia area.

Shapiro centered his bar mitzvah on a letter-writing campaign to free a refusenik, a Jew whose intended emigration was blocked by the USSR’s cruel bureaucrac­y, and he liked to ask Aronchick about the movement, about organizing activism. But then the conversati­ons took a turn Aronchick didn’t expect. Shapiro wanted to know about running a big city.

“I had been the chief lawyer for the city of Philadelph­ia in the early ’80s,” recalled Aronchick, who became a mentor to Shapiro. “He was fascinated when we talked about that.”

In an interview last year with the Forward, after a campaign event with union organizers, Shapiro said he understood organizing as an effective tool when he was six and he joined his parents in campaignin­g for the release of Jews in the Soviet Union. (The refusenik who was the focus of Shapiro’s bar mitzvah activism made it out in time to attend Shapiro’s bar mitzvah, which earned Shapiro Philadelph­ia news coverage.) Shapiro’s parents “set a very good example for me to live a life of faith and service,” he said.

Sharon Levin taught Shapiro government at Akiba Hebrew Academy (now called Jack M. Barrack Hebrew Academy) and said he stood apart at an age when boys interested in politics tend to flex their intellectu­al muscles through outspoken opinions and grandstand­ing.

“This was a pretty difficult group of kids, I don’t mean problemati­c, but kids who like to argue, to debate every point,” she said. “And Josh believes in cooperatio­n, I think of him in those days as a team-builder.”

Todd Eisenberg, now a Montgomery County judge, recalled playing basketball with Shapiro for the high school team.

“He was the point guard so he was always the leader of everything,” Eisenberg said. “And he would always try to get everybody involved

and make everybody feel like they’re a part of the process.”

Eisenberg was impressed by Shapiro’s leadership but not surprised – Shapiro had been pulling together kids from across the playground since first grade, when they first met.

“You know how kids are in cliques or they’re picking on other kids, he was never like that,” he said. “He was always nice to everybody involved in everything.”

In high school, Eisenberg said, Shapiro organized a chapter of Students Against Drunk Driving. “I remember him standing up for everybody and being a part of everything,” he said.

Shapiro ran for student president, and lost, to classmate Ami Eden (who is now CEO of JTA’s parent company, 70 Faces Media). Shapiro has for decades told people it was the only race he lost.

Levin, his government teacher at Akiba, said Shapiro had a realistic assessment of his skills and what he needed to do to succeed. He went to the University of Rochester, qualifying for the Division III basketball team, but soon realized that excellence on the Akiba court was mediocrity in an NCAA setting, she recalled.

“So he said, ‘my fallback from school was government,’ and he was the first sophomore ever to be student president at the University of Rochester,” she said.

“I knocked on every door,” Shapiro recalled to Philadelph­ia Magazine in 2007.

From Rochester, he moved to a series of legislativ­e aide positions in the 1990s on Capitol Hill, working for Pennsylvan­ia representa­tive Joe Hoeffel and New Jersey senator Robert Torricelli. His bosses remember a guy in his early 20s who was soon supervisin­g staffers, and his colleagues recall not minding. Shapiro was pleasant, they say, but clearly on a track for greater things.

“No one ever worked for me who was as bright and focused, with such steely determinat­ion,” Torricelli told The Philadelph­ia Inquirer last year.

By the time he was 31, in 2004, Shapiro was running for his first elected position as a Pennsylvan­ia state representa­tive. He ran against Jon Fox, a Jewish Republican who had been a congressma­n. Shapiro impressed people in the district with his low-key straightfo­rwardness, said Betsy Sheerr, a Jewish lay leader and a Democrat who was friendly with both candidates, and that provided a contrast with Fox, who would shift his positions depending on the listener.

“We used to joke that John Fox was multiple choice, you know that one day he was pro-choice and the next day he wasn’t,” Sheerr recalled. “With Josh, there never has been any confusion about where he stands on things.”

Within two years, Shapiro rose to statewide prominence when he brokered a deal to break a deadlock in the state house, where Democrats had a one-seat majority. Under Shapiro’s plan, Democrats

would back a moderate Republican, Denny O’Brien, to keep the scandal-plagued incumbent speaker, Republican John Perzel, from reelection. As soon as he got the job, O’Brien named Shapiro deputy speaker.

Shapiro’s backers cite the now-legendary episode as a sign of Shapiro’s leadership; his detractors say it is a signal of his self-promotion and gamesmansh­ip. In 2008, Shapiro turned on a one-time mentor, Democratic state representa­tive Bill DeWeese, saying he should step down from the party leadership because of corruption investigat­ions. (DeWeese and Perzel both ended up serving time in prison.)

Schatz said Shapiro remained sensitive to the issues affecting the Jewish community, helping expand Medicare assistance for the elderly, institutin­g Holocaust education and targeting terrorist-backing countries like Iran for sanctions.

A MODERATE Democrat, he also stood out for breaking with the establishm­ent. Aronchick recalled Shapiro in 2004 seeking the endorsemen­t of Howard Dean, the former Vermont governor who was then a standard bearer for progressiv­es.

“Josh is a consensus builder,” he said. “Others might think, ‘Do I look too progressiv­e?’ It wasn’t a thought on Josh’s mind.”

In 2008, Shapiro was among just a handful of establishm­ent Democrats who endorsed Barack Obama for president in a state that Hillary Clinton won in the primaries. Shapiro defended Obama when his former pastor Jeremiah Wright came under fire for antisemiti­c comments.

Obama did well enough in the state, Shapiro said at the time, that he believed he would do well nationally. “I think that demonstrat­es that the hype that senator Obama had a problem with the Jewish community was just that – it was hype. It was not reality.” He would be proved right.

The Democratic machine killed off the “deputy speaker” title in 2009, leading the Philadelph­ia Jewish Exponent to muse, “The Once-Lofty Shapiro; Has He Been Brought Down a Few Pegs?”

But Matt Handel, a onetime Republican activist who left the party after Donald Trump was elected president, said that while Shapiro made enemies in the statehouse, he never let it get to him.

“He can be angry about things, you know, he can find them offensive. But if you watch him speak, he maintains control of what he says and how he responds,” said Handel, who interacted with Shapiro when Handel chaired the Pennsylvan­ia Jewish Coalition, a statewide advocacy body.

Shapiro soon was looking elsewhere: He ran for and won a spot on the three-member Montgomery County Board of Commission­ers, where he was elected chairman, effectivel­y the mayor of the populous and prosperous suburban Philadelph­ia area.

Levin, his high school teacher, remembered a call Shapiro made when he was considerin­g a run for Senate.

“What he said was, if, if I end up going to Washington, I’m gonna do a Biden, you know, back and forth on the train, because it’s so important for my kids to remain at the school where I went to school.” A while later he called back.

He said, “You know, I’m not a legislator. I’m an executive.”

(Levin remains close to Shapiro and his family; last fall, she ran into Shapiro and his daughter Sophia, who led student outreach during his campaign, at an airport in San Antonio. “Look who I saw!” she said in an email, photos of hugs attached.)

In 2016, Shapiro was elected Pennsylvan­ia attorney-general. He led battles against Trump’s efforts to limit entry to the United States of people from a number of Muslim-majority countries, and to keep Trump acolytes from overturnin­g his 2020 loss in the state. He also led a widely publicized investigat­ion of child abuse in the Roman Catholic Church.

Shapiro’s gubernator­ial campaign launch last April was an ad in which he declared, “I make it home Friday nights for Sabbath dinner,” while the camera closed on challot. It also stars his four kids and his wife, Lori, whom he refers to as his “high school sweetheart.”

SHAPIRO’S ULTIMATE victory was especially sweet to many Jews because he defeated a Republican, Doug Mastriano, who had centered on Shapiro’s Jewishness, but not in a positive way. Mastriano had allied with an outspoken antisemite, Andrew Torba, the founder of the farright social media site Gab, paying for promotion on Gab and accepting a donation from Torba. (Mastriano renounced antisemiti­sm, but pointedly, not Torba.) Mastriano also mocked the Jewish school Shapiro attended and where he sends his four children.

It is a source of delight to Shapiro and his backers that his open Jewish identity did not alienate Pennsylvan­ians; indeed, he fared well in the conservati­ve center of the state, a fact that his campaign boasted about in an email sent to the media a week after the election, when most campaigns are wrapping up business.

“Josh Shapiro won Beaver, Berks, Cumberland, and Luzerne counties – significan­tly outperform­ing Joe Biden’s margins in 2020 and flipping those counties blue,” the campaign said, attaching a chart showing the flips. “From the very beginning of his campaign, Josh vowed to go everywhere. That meant campaignin­g heavily where other Democrats don’t often win and investing in communitie­s across the state.”

Jill Zipin, a longtime Shapiro backer who leads Democratic Jewish Outreach Pennsylvan­ia, said Mastriano’s Christian nationalis­m did not play well in a state that was founded on religious freedoms. “Pennsylvan­ia was founded on religious pluralism, it was founded by Quakers,” she said. “Anyone of any religious stripe was welcome.”

Mastriano’s team, toward the end of the campaign, appeared to notice the resonance Shapiro’s beliefs had among Pennsylvan­ians. His surrogates pivoted to claiming Shapiro was not a genuine Jew, with one consultant saying Shapiro’s defense of abortion rights made him inauthenti­c, and Mastriano’s wife claiming she and her husband loved Israel more than Jews did.

The moves may have backfired, said Schatz. Shapiro’s Jewish expression, she said, “was a way of actually relating to religious conservati­ves. They say that ‘maybe he doesn’t follow our religion, but because he does have a belief, he’s a religious person.’”

In a sign of his polish with Pennsylvan­ians, Shapiro’s margin of victory was substantia­lly wider than that of John Fetterman, the Democrat elected to the state’s open Senate spot.

“While we won this race – and by the way, we won it pretty convincing­ly – I want you to know, the job is not done, the task is not complete,” Shapiro said during his victory speech, prompting 15 seconds of cheers and applause.

Shapiro has stayed largely out of the public eye since his election, instead focusing on putting together a transition team and preparing for his inaugurati­on. He did not respond to JTA’s requests for an interview.

That transition team bears signs of Shapiro’s long and deep Jewish ties. Marcel Groen, a retired attorney on the economic developmen­t advisory committee, first met the new governor because he attended synagogue with Shapiro’s father. He became a mentor to the inchoate politician, who several years ago recruited Groen’s mother, a Holocaust survivor, to speak to incarcerat­ed teens.

During the encounter, which Groen and Shapiro did not make public at the time, the teens went from standoffis­h to hugging 93-year-old Sipora Groen after hearing her story. (Sipora died in 2017.) It was, Groen said, typical of Shapiro’s approach to changing hearts and minds: “Josh realized that’s how you reach kids who got in trouble and who needed to understand life in a different manner,” he recalled.

Shapiro’s inaugurati­on were laced with Jewish significan­ce. In addition to the Tanach from the Tree of Life synagogue, his swearing-in took place on a Bible used by a Jewish soldier from Pennsylvan­ia in World War II.

But asked by CNN’s Dana Bash after the election if he wanted to make history as America’s first Jewish president, Shapiro demurred.

“I have an ambition to get a little bit of sleep, to reintroduc­e myself to my kid, and then to serve the good people of Pennsylvan­ia as their governor,” he said.

 ?? (Mark Makela/Getty Images/JTA) ?? JOSH SHAPIRO gives a victory speech to supporters in Oaks, Pennsylvan­ia, after winning the state’s gubernator­ial election in November.
(Mark Makela/Getty Images/JTA) JOSH SHAPIRO gives a victory speech to supporters in Oaks, Pennsylvan­ia, after winning the state’s gubernator­ial election in November.
 ?? (Mark Makela/Getty Images/JTA) ?? SHAPIRO EMBRACES his wife, Lori, on stage after giving his victory speech.
(Mark Makela/Getty Images/JTA) SHAPIRO EMBRACES his wife, Lori, on stage after giving his victory speech.

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