#GE2015: Majority of British Jews will vote Tory, new poll claims

2015/04/08
Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron and Ed Miliband, the leader of the opposition Labour Party. (Reuters/Dan Kitwood)

The survey, conducted among readers of the Jewish Chronicle, involved a sample of over 500 British Jews. It found 68.9 percent of participants intend to vote Conservative, while 22 percent will hand Labour Party leader Ed Miliband their backing.


The study found 60.5 percent of respondents thought the Tories offered the best policies on Israel and the Middle East, while only 7.7 percent thought the same for Labour.


It also reveals 64 percent of participants believe Cameron has the “best attitude towards British Jewry,” while only 13 percent saw Miliband as the best community supporter.



Furthermore, 73 percent said the parties’ attitudes to Israel were “very” important in influencing how they would vote.


Labour leader Miliband received staunch criticism over the perceived “toxic anti-Israeli” stance he assumed during last summer’s Gaza war.



Jewish Chronicle political correspondent Marcus Dysch blamed “toxic” Miliband for Labour’s loss of support among British Jews.


One of the “most obvious” reasons he lost support is due to him “positioning himself as Israel’s chief political critic” during the Gaza conflict, he said.



Ed Miliband’s unpopularity with the Jewish community has long been received wisdom,” said Dysch, but the extent of ill-feeling demonstrated in the figures is “jaw-dropping” and “overwhelmingly damning.”


One has to wonder, having observed Cameron’s love-bombing of British Jewry for the past two years, did Labour not bother at any point to respond in its own way?” he added.


British Jews see both the party and its leader as toxic” on issues concerning the Middle East and Jewish community.



Miliband is the descendant of Jewish refugees who fled the Holocaust. The Labour leader recently paid tribute to his grandfather who died in the Nazi death camps.



Miliband describes himself as a “Jewish atheist” and told The Telegraph his religious views were a “private matter.”


He told the New Statesman his “Jewishness and Britishness” are intertwined because of his family history.



Speaking to RT, Gideon Smith, Chairman of Yachad UK, a pro-Israel and pro-peace movement for British Jews, said: “These figures sound about right and in line with previous elections.”


The Jewish community votes in a similar pattern to their non-Jewish neighbors.


Smith said there was a “slightly greater proportion of Jews living in traditional Tory areas,” and this “accounts for the higher percentage voting Conservative.”



I have many friends active in both Labour and Conservative circles with healthy debates in both,” he said.



On Twitter, Hani Latif, chair of Durham University Labour club, said: “Large majority of British Jews are voting Tory.”


READ MORE: 1 injured, 6 arrested in London 'anti-Semitic' synagogue attack (VIDEO)


Labour must reaffirm its commitment to Israel and to the eradication of anti-Semitism,” he said.


Patrick Brione, director of research at Survation, told IBTimes the British Jewish vote “could have some effect on some seats in London and Manchester.”


The Jewish population in the UK is quite concentrated on a number of geographic areas so within those areas they might well form a not insignificant part of the electorate,” he said.


“In certain parts of London and Manchester there might be seats where votes from the Jewish community are going to be quite significant.”


Elsewhere, a poll from Populus put Labour 2 percentage points ahead of the Tories (33 percent vs 31 percent).


The survey was published after former PM Tony Blair advised voters that a referendum on EU membership could diminish the UK.


No comments :

Post a Comment