| |||||||||
October 23, 2009 | 11:33 am
Posted by Rob Eshman
The White House announced that President Barack Obama will attend the largest gathering of North American Jewish community leaders.
Obama will address the 2009 General Assembly (GA) of the Jewish Federations of North America in Washington, D.C. on Monday morning, November 9.
According to organizers, the GA will be the first Jewish communal organization event Obama has addressed since taking office.
“We are honored to be hosting President Obama at the GA,” said Dede Feinberg of Washington, who with her husband Kenneth is serving as the GA’s North America co-chair, in partnership with International Co-Chair Leonid Nevzlin of Israel.
“The voice of President Obama will surely expand our thinking and stretch our perspectives,” said Joe Kanfer, Chair of the Board of Trustees of The Jewish Federations of North America.
This year’s GA, with the theme “Remember When You Thought Anything Was Possible? It Still Is,” highlights how The Jewish Federations of North America helps the Jewish people worldwide. Top Israeli government officials and other leaders from the worlds of politics, business and philanthropy are also scheduled to speak. The GA, which takes place November 8-10, is one of the largest annual Jewish communal gatherings in North America.
The sudden decision to address a significant and high profile Jewish audience comes as poll numbers show Obama’s popularity declining among Jewish voters, and his approval ratings among Israelis in the single digits.
Writing from an Aipac conference in San Diego, Jerusalem Post Editor-in-Chief David Horowitz laid out Obama’s Israel/Jewish problem:
But the administration’s [recent] emphasis on the “Jewish state” of Israel, along with the signs of an emerging Israel-US middle ground on settlements, the demand that the Palestinian Authority come back to the peace table without preconditions, and gestures like Obama’s unexpected message of greeting for President Shimon Peres’s Facing Tomorrow conference this week - all these would indicate that the Obama presidency is attempting to slightly reset its relationship to Israel.
It is a minor shift - and not, it should be stressed, an ideological change - doubtless precipitated in part by Obama’s dismal approval ratings in Israel. It is a consequence, too, of the belated realization that trying to corner Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu over a settlement freeze, extending to Jewish neighborhoods of east Jerusalem, was simultaneously alienating mainstream Israel while pushing Mahmoud Abbas ever higher up a tree; how could the PA president agree to talk with Israel when Netanyahu wasn’t even meeting Washington’s demands? And it may also be no coincidence that the subtly more supportive stance has taken shape since veteran Middle East expert Dennis Ross moved into a White House role more proximate to the president.
“The administration has stumbled, no doubt about it,” a senior AIPAC figure who strongly supports Obama told me this week. “The ferocity of the settlement freeze demand, most especially as stated by Secretary of State Clinton, and the failure to highlight Israel’s historical territorial legitimacy in Obama’s Cairo speech in June - these were mistakes. And now they’re recalibrating.”
Doubtless the General Assembly speech is part of that strategy. Though Obama won close to 80 percent of the Jewish vote in November, his support among Jews has cooled. As Raiphe Sonenshein wrote in The Jewish Journal:
he latest Gallup poll indicates that in September, President Obama’s approval rating held steady at 52 percent. He has dropped from the stratosphere into the rough-and-tumble territory of normal politics.
Among Jews, his support level is still a healthy 64 percent - but far lower than it once was.
While Jews are still far more pro-Obama than whites in general (who are at 44 percent), Jewish backing of the president has declined from their 78 percent vote for him in November and their 83 percent approval rating in January.
Obama’s decline in Jewish support is much like that among Hispanics and other whites, who have been drifting downward for months. Clearly the long march toward health care reform has taken its toll.
My sense is that missteps in the Middle East have had as much or more to do with Obama’s declining popularity among Jews as has his health care, economic and other policy challenges. At the GA, he will have to find the words to reaffirm his strong support for Israel, to use his rockstar, Nobel Prize-winner status on the world stage to make the moral case for a strong Jewish state, to rally the world against a corrupt Iranian regime bent on acquiring nuclear weapons, and to advance his vision of Mideast peace in a way that does not isolate or single out Israelis. On this last point, he can’t be seen as backing down, but he has to find a way to ally himself with Israeli’s deepest hopes, rather than stoking their ever present fears. My suggestion: invoke Rabin. The late Prime Minister, assassinated while on the brink of forging peace, still stands as a symbol of what is possible for a strong and confident Israel, backed by unwavering American support, to achieve. The more Obama can stand on that GA podium in the shadow of Rabin, the more effective his speech will be.
More information on the GA is available here.
3.17.10 at 10:26 am | What is the legal status of Jerusalem under . . .
3.11.10 at 9:58 am | . . .
3.10.10 at 12:09 pm | The Passing of Corey Haim: Haim was reported to . . .
3.9.10 at 2:01 pm | A new angle on AJU catalog’s yoga . . .
3.9.10 at 1:36 pm | Linguists who study changes in Internet-related . . .
3.8.10 at 12:43 pm | Actor offers Hebrew blessings in his Na’vi rant . . .
3.17.10 at 10:26 am | What is the legal status of Jerusalem under . . . (46)
2.29.08 at 7:14 pm | . . . (32)
3.11.10 at 9:58 am | . . . (21)
We welcome your feedback.
Your information will not be shared or sold without your consent. Get all the details.
israel jewish video obama anti-semitism jews chanukah comedy orit hollywood racism youtube jay firestone jew zionism videojew hate humor jewishjournal.com menorah iran jewish journal hanukkah gaza funny barack obama lebanon mccain jerusalem geneva zion terror rosh hashanah torah arfa tv united nations kosher web los angeles
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
August 2006
“...This year’s GA, with the theme “Remember When You Thought Anything Was Possible? It Still Is,” highlights how The Jewish Federations of North America helps the Jewish people worldwide.”
What horsehit. Helping Jewish prople worldwide? How about reopening and financing the JCC’s here at home? How about not investing $16,000,000 from the community chest with a fraudulent speculator?
The Jews have brought the issues of the Obama adm. on to themselves. This is the worst government since Carter, and unless the majority of Jews and the GA wake up, we will see Israel taking on Iran while Obama dithers about, taking family portraits and bitching about Fox news.
If we lose Israel, the Jews have no one to blame but themselves
Any words that this man utters should be viewed with considerable doubt. You Jews who support him, suffer from the disease of “self hate” as well as naivety, similar to that of those poor dead Jews in Germany 70+/- years ago. Why does this report give only the left wing slant on everything when there is a verifiable conservative perspective available? This latter relies upon an historical,repetitive account regarding the enemy which is irrefutable!
Will any Jewish “leader” be brave enough to protest publicly against Obama’s attempt to pressure Israel into committing suicide?