Kamala Harris Passing on Josh Shapiro for VP Cost Her Jewish Support, Exit Poll Shows
Error: Contact form not found.
by Corey Walker

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro (D) holds a rally in support of US Vice President Kamala Harris’ Democratic presidential election campaign in Ambler, Pennsylvania, US, July 29, 2024. Photo: REUTERS/Rachel Wisniewski
US Vice President Kamala Harris’s failed presidential bid could have received more support from Jewish voters had the Democratic nominee selected Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro as her running mate, an exit poll revealed.
Had Harris picked Shapiro — a popular moderate who is also Jewish — instead of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D-MN), she would have won Jewish voters in the critical swing state of Pennsylvania by a margin of 53 percent to 38 percent, according to a survey conducted by the Honan Strategy Group for the Teach Coalition, an affiliate of the Jewish Orthodox Union. The Harris-Walz ticket ultimately won Jewish voters within the Keystone State by a narrower margin of 48 percent to 41 percent.
The exit poll was first reported by The New York Post earlier this week.
Over the course of her ill-fated campaign, Harris had been dogged by accusations of being both soft on antisemitism and an unreliable ally of Israel. The polling results suggest that selecting Shapiro, a vocal defender of the Jewish state, would have helped bolster some of her support among Jewish citizens.
Harris’s decision to bypass Shapiro for the vice-presidential nomination elicited surprise, outrage, and even accusations of antisemitism. Many observers perceived Shapiro, a popular governor with charismatic oratory skills, to be a strong choice to compliment Harris on the presidential ticket.
However, Shapiro’s repeated passionate defenses of the Jewish state and repudiation of anti-Israel protesters infuriated many within the far-left flank of the Democratic Party. In an interview with CNN, Shapiro condemned anti-Israel college campus protesters, saying that such demonstrations would be met with fierce backlash “if this were people dressed up in KKK outfits or KKK regalia.” Shapiro has also backed a Pennsylvania bill that would “financially penalize the government of Israel or commercial financial activity in Israel.”
In the days following Hamas’s massacre across southern Israel last Oct. 7, Shapiro, a practicing Jew, issued statements condemning the Palestinian terrorist group and gave a speech at a local synagogue. The governor also ordered the US and Pennsylvania Commonwealth flags to fly at half mast outside the state capitol to honor the victims.
Then-Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, now the president-elect, pounced on Harris’s snub of Shapiro, suggesting that she blocked the Pennsylvania governor from the ticket because he is Jewish. Trump argued that Shapiro could anger Muslim voters in critical swing states such as Michigan, especially with a heightened focused on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict amid the war in Gaza. However, Shapiro defended Harris, claiming that antisemitism had nothing to do with his failed bid to become the Democratic nominee for vice president.
Some commentators suggested that Harris passed over Shapiro because she was worried about his ambition, a lack of chemistry, and the possibility of the governor overshadowing her.
Czech Republic Emerges as Israel’s New European Shield Amid Escalating EU Pressure Campaign
Texas Sex Therapist in Congressional Race Calls for Castrating, Incarcerating ‘American Zionists’
Trump Says Negotiations With Iran in Final Stages, Warns of Attacks if Deal Fails
Slain Security Guard of California Mosque Engaged Gunmen in Shootout, Hailed as Hero
Israel Takes Step Toward Snap Election as Knesset Votes to Dissolve
Tucker Carlson on Israeli TV: US, Israel Are ‘Not Democracies,’ Israel ‘Most Violent Country in the World’
Sally Rooney to Publish Hebrew Translation of Latest Book With Pro-BDS Israeli Publisher
Antisemitism in Plain Sight: When Professionals Show Empathy to Everyone — But Jews
What Being a Zionist Student Leader at Clark University Has Taught Me
For Israel, the Accusation Itself Becomes Proof





Antisemitism in Plain Sight: When Professionals Show Empathy to Everyone — But Jews
Trump Says US May Strike Iran Again but That Tehran Wants Deal
Lebanese People Broadly Support Hezbollah’s Disarmament, Peace With Israel, New Poll Finds
Somaliland Says It Will Open an Embassy in Jerusalem, Israel to Reciprocate
Yeshiva University Holds Conference Calling for ‘Social Science’ Study of Rising Antisemitism



