Boro Park Op-ed Voting: Our Community Is Powerless: Here’s Why

By Ezra Friedlander
We are living in difficult times. There’s been much consternation within our
community, and rightfully so, about the apparent double standard currently
being leveled at us. We endured the
challenges of lockdowns and sheltering in place, but now as the restrictions
are being lifted, our playgrounds, our schools and our businesses are still
closed. Most recently, our sleep-away
camps are prohibited from opening.
We can point fingers and beat our chests, our blood pressure
can boil in frustration, but here’s the bottom line. For those who are frustrated and don’t
understand why our community is not being heard, I have a simple solution. Start voting.
Yes, elected officials have power, but only to the extent
that we empower them. What do I
mean? When elected officials represent a
community that votes in huge numbers, they will take notice. Our community is vibrant, but relatively
small in numbers. If we vote in a proportion
greater than the general population, that would empower us. When a community votes, they are
empowered.
It’s time for our community to wake up. Many of us don’t vote. We don’t get involved in local elections and
we’re not even registered. Yet we
continue to expect that government regulations and policies will benefit our community,
even with minimal effort or involvement on our part.
It doesn’t work that way.
That’s not reality. Reality means
that we need to acknowledge our responsibility.
Reality means we need to engage in the system and we need to do our part.
If I sound frustrated, let me explain. Several months ago, I accompanied State
Assemblyman Simcha Eichenstein as he stood outside a Boro Park shul requesting
local residents to sign petitions that would allow our community candidates to
appear on the ballot in the upcoming Democratic primary. It’s a simple petition but it’s significant
because without the requisite signatures, our candidates would not be eligible
to run for election. The only
requirement is that those who sign must be registered as Democrats.
Shockingly, the response appalling. Many members of our
community are reluctant to register as Democrats, and many are not registered
at all. Of every five people that were
approached, two were registered as Republicans, and two were not registered at
all. That left just one out of five who
were eligible to sign the petitions. This is deeply disturbing.
Look, I get it. As
members of this community, we cherish our timeless values and traditions. Yes, I realize that many of the electorate
who either registered as Republicans or chose not to vote feel that the mandate
that defines the current Democratic party is anathema to them. So how can they identify as card-carrying
Democrats when they vehemently oppose the progressive policies that represent
the Democratic agenda? How can they flip
a lever in the voting booth in favor of candidates with whom they may have
irreconcilable differences?
But we are making a huge mistake. We need to vote with our brains, not with our
hearts. We need to vote smartly and
strategically. Our community is small in
numbers so ultimately our votes will not determine the outcome of statewide or
national elections. But we can make a
significant impact in local citywide race.
And more importantly, our local elected
officials will sit up and take notice. This
means they will potentially embrace and advocate for the issues that are of
paramount importance to us, to whatever extent possible.
By registering as Republicans we have essentially opted out
of the system. We may be making a
statement or standing on principal but in the end we have abdicated our voice
in the conversation. Elected
officials are essentially politicians.
Their goal is to get elected and when they win, they pay attention to who
voted for them. With the help of modern
technology, that can easily be determined. Just a few clicks can reveal an analysis of
community voting patterns.
Do members of our community have profound differences with
many of our elected officials on matters of platform and policy? Certainly.
But we can work together with them to craft an agenda that would benefit
us all if we have the political power to do so.
On many occasions, we have accessed City Hall to advance our issues and
our agenda. Yet time and time again our
community’s self proclaimed spokespeople accuse anyone who attempts to
collaborate for the common good of being a sellout.
Unless an issue personally affects them. Then they are suddenly eager to ‘make a deal
with the devil’. This is called
hypocrisy, plain and simple.
We can make an impact.
Let’s consider the Boro Park community, a vibrant neighborhood with
25,000 families. If just two people per
household would come out and vote in a given election, that would add up to a
total of 50,000 votes. That’s a huge
number that could potentially swing a Democratic primary election. The same can be said for other Jewish
neighborhoods across the city.
But instead we bury our heads in the sand and have thus
relinquished a precious opportunity and a fiduciary responsibility to our
families and our communities.
I may work in government relations, but this is not about
me. I am writing this because I feel
that we as a community are being shortchanged.
Democrats outnumber Republicans in New York eight to one. In other words, any Democrat running for
office is virtually assured victory in a general election. If the numbers were in reverse, and
Republicans outnumbered Democrats, I would be urging us all to register as
Republicans. But this is the reality,
and we have to deal with it. And our primary
task is to ensure that the Democrat who will ultimately be on the ticket best
represents us and will present us with the best possible leverage.
Other communities are voting, you can be sure of that. Our absence in the voting booth essentially empowers
them further. We are relinquishing our
constitutional rights and handing them over on a silver platter, thereby
greatly diminishing our clout. All because
we stubbornly insist on clinging to principles that hold no practical purpose.