It’s not every day that America has a Jewish presidential candidate with a real chance of winning a nomination (or, in fact, two Jewish candidates). And it’s not every day that a pro-Israel Jewish PAC opens its checkbook and airs ads attacking a Jewish presidential candidate, arguing he’s too old to fill the highest position in the land.
But as Bernie Sanders began to surge in Iowa and lead in the polls of the first and second states to vote, it was party over community, at least for some Democratic Jews.
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