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Congress a melting pot of faiths

By ELIZABETH WILLIAMSON - The Washington Post
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WASHINGTON - While Democrats celebrated the election of the House's first
female speaker,

Another milestone passed more quietly: The 110th Congress includes more
Jewish lawmakers than any other in history, and all but four are Democrats.

About 2 percent of Americans identify themselves as Jewish. But in Congress,
the proportion of Jewish members now is four times that. Six new Jewish
House members were sworn in last week, bringing the total to 30. In the
Senate, the 13 Jewish members include freshmen Benjamin Cardin, D-Md., and
Bernard Sanders, I-Vt., according to the National Jewish Democratic Council
(NJDC).

Other faith-related facts: This Congress includes its first Muslim member
and, in Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (Nev.), its highest-ranking Mormon
ever. Catholics remain the largest single faith group in Congress, at about
30 percent - slightly larger than their proportion of the U.S. population.
Baptists, Methodists and Presbyterians outnumber Jewish members, who
outnumber Episcopalians.

In making its count, the NJDC, which bills itself as the national voice of
Jewish Democrats, counted only those lawmakers who identify themselves as
Jewish.

"This is a recent phenomenon," said NJDC Executive Director Ira Forman.
"Fifty years ago, politics was not a Jewish profession. People would say
arts and entertainment, law and medicine, retail and things like scrap
metals, but they would never say politics."

Forman attributes this success to the rise of issue-based politics, which
has begun to supplant patronage-based party machines in boosting candidates
to national office.

What's more, the new Jewish Democrats hail from states hardly seen as Jewish
strongholds, including Tennessee, Kentucky, New Hampshire and Wisconsin. The
House has one Jewish Republican, Virginia's Eric Cantor. In the Senate,
Republicans Norm Coleman (Minn.) and Arlen Specter (Pa.) are Jewish.

"Jewish members used to come from Jewish districts," said Sandy Maisel, a
professor of government and director of the Goldfarb Center at Colby College
in Maine who is co-author with Forman of "Jews in American Politics." "Now
they come from wherever they've caught the feelings of people on the issues
of the day. . That's going to be a continuing trend."

The Republican Party has sunk millions into wooing the Jewish vote, but
Jewish voters, traditionally Democratic, have moved ever further from the
GOP in recent years. In the midterm elections, nearly 90 percent of Jewish
voters voted Democratic, according to exit polls, one of the largest
proportions in history.

Pollsters say the GOP failed to counter Jewish voters' opposition to
Republican stands on issues such as reproductive rights, stem cell research
and the Iraq war. And then there's the Republican Party platform in
President Bush's home state of Texas, which has declared the United States
to be a Christian nation.

Forman does not believe Jewish members will necessarily vote as a bloc.
"They're not lock step," he said. "You have American Jews on both sides of
many issues."

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