by Sheldon G. Adelson
When members of the 
Democratic Party booed the inclusion of God and Jerusalem in their party
 platform this year, I thought of my parents. They would have been 
astounded.
The immigrant family in
 which I grew up was, in the matter of politics, typical of the Jews of 
Boston in the 1930s and '40s. Of the two major parties, the Democrats 
were in those days the more supportive of Jewish causes.
Indeed, only liberal 
politicians campaigned in our underprivileged neighborhood. Boston's 
Republicans, insofar as we knew them, were remote, wealthy elites 
("Boston Brahmins"), some of whose fancy country clubs didn't accept 
Jews.
It therefore went 
without saying that we were Democrats. Like most Jews around the 
country, being Democratic was part of our identity, as much a feature of
 our collective personality as our religion.
So why did I leave the party? 
My critics nowadays 
like to claim it's because I became wealthy or because I didn't want to 
pay taxes or because of some other conservative caricature. No, the 
truth is that the Democratic Party has changed in ways that no longer 
fit with someone of my upbringing.
One obvious example is 
the party's new attitude toward Israel. A sobering Gallup poll from last
 March asked: "Are your sympathies more with the Israelis or more with 
the Palestinians?" Barely 53% of Democrats chose Israel, the sole 
liberal democracy in the region. By contrast, an overwhelming 78% of 
Republicans sympathized with Israel.
Nowhere was this change
 in Democratic sympathies more evident than in the chilling reaction on 
the floor of the Democratic convention in September when the question of
 Israel's capital came up for a vote. Anyone who witnessed the 
delegates' angry screaming and fist-shaking could see that far more is 
going on in the Democratic Party than mere opposition to citing 
Jerusalem in their platform. There is now a visceral anti-Israel 
movement among rank-and-file Democrats, a disturbing development that my
 parents' generation would not have ignored. 
Another troubling 
change is that Democrats seem to have moved away from the immigrant 
values of my old neighborhood — in particular, individual charity and 
neighborliness. After studying tax data from the IRS, the nonpartisan 
Chronicle of Philanthropy recently reported that states that vote 
Republican are now far more generous to charities than those voting 
Democratic. In 2008, the seven least generous states all voted for 
President Barack Obama. My father, who kept a charity box for the poor 
in our house, would have frowned on this fact about modern Democrats.
Democrats would reply 
that taxation and government services are better vehicles for helping 
the underprivileged. And, yes, government certainly has its role. But 
when you look at states where Democrats have enjoyed years of one-party 
dominance — California, Illinois, New York — you find that their liberal
 policies simply don't deliver on their promises of social justice.
Take, for example, 
Obama's adopted home state. In October, a nonpartisan study of Illinois'
 finances by the State Budget Crisis Task Force offered painful evidence
 that liberal Illinois was suffering from abject economic, demographic 
and social decline. With the worst credit rating in the country, and 
with the second-biggest public debt per capita, the Prairie State "has 
been doing back flips on a high wire, without a net," according to the 
report.
Political scientist 
Walter Russell Mead summed up the sad results of these findings at The 
American Interest: "Illinois politicians, including the present 
president of the United States, have wrecked one of the country's 
potentially most prosperous and dynamic states, condemned millions of 
poor children to substandard education, failed to maintain vital 
infrastructure, choked business development and growth through 
unsustainable tax and regulatory policies — and still failed to appease 
the demands of the public sector unions and fee-seeking Wall Street 
crony capitalists who make billions off the state's distress."
At times, it seems 
almost as if Obama wants to impose the failed Illinois model on the 
whole country. Each year of his presidency has produced unsustainable 
deficits, and he takes no responsibility for his spending. Worse still, 
unemployment has become chronic, and many Americans have given up on 
looking for work.
Whenever Obama deplores
 the wealthy ("fat-cat bankers," "millionaires and billionaires," "at a 
certain point you've made enough money," and so on), it tells me that he
 has failed to learn the economic lessons of Illinois, and that he still
 doesn't understand the vital role entrepreneurs play in creating jobs 
in our society.
As a person who has 
been able to rise from poverty to affluence, and who has created jobs 
and work benefits for tens of thousands of families, I feel obligated to
 speak up and support the American ideals I grew up with — charity, 
self-reliance, accountability. These are the age-old virtues that help 
make our communities prosperous. Yet, sadly, the Democratic Party no 
longer seems to value them as it once did. That's why I switched 
parties, and why I'm now giving amply to Republicans. 
Although I don't agree 
with every Republican position — I'm liberal on several social issues — 
there is enough common cause with the party for me to know I've made the
 right choice.
It's the choice that, I
 believe, my old immigrant Jewish neighbors would have made. They would 
not have let a few disagreements with Republicans void the importance of
 siding with the political party that better supports liberal 
democracies like Israel, the party that better exemplifies the spirit of
 charity, and the party with economic policies that would certainly be 
better for those Americans now looking for work.
The Democratic Party just isn't what it used to be.
This article was first published in The Wall Street Journal. 
Full disclosure: Sheldon and Dr. Miriam Adelson own a company that is the primary shareholder of Israel Hayom.
                    Sheldon G. Adelson
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=2826
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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