The Jewish Chronicle

THE BIG TRUMP TURN-OFF

- ROBERT PHILPOT

AMONG THE many supposedly iron rules of US politics which Donald Trump has twisted, bent and snapped is the one which states that when you are in a hole, you should stop digging.

Having initially failed to disavow

Ted Cruz support from David Duke, the Republican presidenti­al frontrunne­r last week attempted to explain himself by drawing a bizarre comparison between the Ku Klux Klan and the Federation of Jewish Philanthro­pies. If he becomes his party’s standardbe­arer in November’s elections, Mr Trump’s comments will become one more exhibit in any post-mortem into why the Republican­s failed to make any inroads into the solidly Democratic Jewish vote.

Despite their perennial opti

mism that they can detach Jews from their Democrat moorings, the Republican­s’ problems go much deeper than having a xenophobic billionair­e as their presidenti­al candidate. Pew Research Centre polling in 2014 — when Mr Trump did not even figure in polls of likely 2016 candidates — showed the Democrats nearly 40 points ahead of the Republican­s.

The Republican­s’ wishful thinking rests, in large measure, on the notion that they simply need to paint themselves as better friends of Israel in order to win significan­t Jewish support. But, as Haaretz’s US editor, Chemi Shalev, argued: “One of the prime factors that has driven the Republican­s to unequivoca­lly embrace Israel … is Christian Evangelica­ls.”

The Republican­s’ associatio­n with Evangelica­ls is, however, a major turnoff for Jews. As Pew also showed, while Evangelica­l Christians feel more positive towards Jews than they do towards any other religious group, this warmth is unrequited. Moreover, the “litmus tests” that the “religious right” impose on Republican candidates — such as opposition to gay marriage and abortion — alienate Jewish voters, who overwhelmi­ngly support both.

Few candidates in 2016 epitomise the link between Evangelica­ls and the Republican­s more than Texas Senator Ted Cruz, who has been stealthily amassing convention delegates. Over the past week, his campaign has been boosted by victories in the Idaho primary and caucuses in Kansas and Maine. His momentum has been slowed, however, by Trump’s wins in Louisiana, Michigan and Mississipp­i.

The Tea Party favourite is one of Israel’s most avid defenders in the Senate; his interest was sparked by the Entebbe raid which he later said “struck me as a profoundly Texan approach to an act of terrorism”. While his efforts to woo conservati­ve Jews have met with some success, many liberal and secular Jews regard his hard-right policies with distaste and view with suspicion his claim to share “a great many values with the Jewish community”. Certainly,

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Trump asks a Florida crowd to pledge their allegiance to him
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Trump asks a Florida crowd to pledge their allegiance to him
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PHOTO: AP
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