PRINCETON, NJ -- There is little sign that President Obama is suffering disproportionately in support among Jews; 54% approved of his job performance from Aug. 1-Sept. 15, 13 percentage points higher than his overall 41% approval rating during that time, and similar to the average 14-point gap seen throughout Obama's term.





American Jews' support for Obama has come into question after Republican Bob Turner won a surprise special election victory in the heavily Jewish 9th Congressional District in New York. The seat was previously held by Democratic Rep. Anthony Weiner and has been reliably Democratic for decades. Some analysts suggested that Turner's victory was a result of the district's Jewish voters sending a message about their dissatisfaction with President Obama's policies.

The current findings are based on interviews with 514 Jewish Americans from Aug. 1-Sept. 15 as part of Gallup Daily tracking. Although the differences between Jewish and nationwide approval of Obama differ somewhat from month to month -- partly because Jewish approval averages vary more, given smaller sample sizes averaging about 350 per month -- the patterns of both averages have generally followed each other closely. The 13-point gap between Jewish and national Obama approval ratings from early August through mid-September 2011 is essentially no different from the 14-point average across the 32 months since Obama took office.





Obama's 41% approval rating in August was the lowest monthly average of his administration, but his current approval rating among Jews is not unprecedented. Jews gave Obama a 55% approval rating as long ago as July 2010, and Jewish approval reached 54% in November 2010.

Bottom Line

Although Obama's approval rating among Jewish Americans has been declining, it has generally declined no more than it has among all Americans. This calls into question attempts to link a decline in Obama's approval among Jews to his statements or policies on matters important to Jewish policymakers and lobbyists. These include his major "1967 borders" speech in mid-May and the apparent rebuke of the president in this week's special congressional election in New York, which a Republican won in a heavily Jewish district. All in all, Obama continues to do better among Jews than among all Americans, and there has been little change in that pattern so far throughout the first 2 ½ years of his administration.