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Florida delegates: We’re behind Barack, but have work to do back home

“I don’t want anyone to blame Hillary if [Obama] loses the election,” said Jewish Democratic National Convention Hillary Clinton delegate Bill Kling Wednesday morning. Her speech was “absolutely heartfelt. …I think she did enough to show her support.”

The 80-year-old Plantation resident was representative of his fellow Florida Jewish delegates pledged for Clinton. They lauded her speech Tuesday night, said they were 100 percent behind Barack Obama but acknowledged that some of their fellow Jewish Clinton supporters in South Florida were still not sold on the presumptive nominee.

“A lot of [Jewish Democrats] are saying …. they’re not going to vote,” said Kling.

Diana Mazel Pittarelli of Hollywood said she said seen the hostility toward Obama in Broward County that others have also described. “A lot of these people … don’t know enough about him.” She added that many of the reasons they provide for not liking Obama — from his name to his policies on the Middle East — are simply “excuses for other things,” namely their reluctance to vote for a black candidate. As a realtor who has brought black families to South Florida condo boards, Pittarelli said she is familiar with it.

Others were more optimistic. “Little by little,” she’s seeing former Clinton supporters jump on the Obama bandwagon, said Diane Glasser, first vice chair of the Florida Democratic Party and a superdelegate. She hoped she’d see some further movement when she returned home, due to Clinton’s speech.

“It’s hard for older people to let go,” said Bunny Steinman of Boynton Beach, president of the Democratic Club of Greater Boynton. But “I see people coming around. … I think it’s doable.”

Steinman, like others, said the most help would be for the Democratic candidate himself to introduce himself personally to their neighbors. “Obama needs to come down and get in to some of these older communities,” she said.

Even an Obama delegate could understand the reason for some reluctance by Clinton supporters. “It’s a process,” said Mark Alan Siegel of Boca Raton. “When the future of the Jewish people is at stake, you want to be really careful.” He said that more education and dissemination of “accurate information … around the minyan table” should do the trick.

Does this means she votes 3 times? Or 4?

Spotted in the Ohio delegation on the floor of the Democratic Party convention in Denver: A woman bearing a handwritten sign, “This Asian American bisexual Jewish woman is for Barack Obama.”

Remembering Tubbs Jones

The National Jewish Democratic Council is calling Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones (D-Ohio) “an outstanding advocate for Cleveland and issues important to the Jewish community” who “will be deeply missed.”

Tubbs Jones, whose district in eastern Cleveland and the city’s suburbs was heavily Jewish, died Wednesday of a brain aneurysm at the age of 58. She was the first African American woman to represent Ohio in Congress.

Poll: Obama leads in Florida, Pa. & Ohio

From Quinnipiac:

  • Florida: Obama edges McCain 47 - 43 percent
  • Ohio: Obama tops McCain 48 - 42 percent
  • Pennsylvania: Obama leads McCain 52 - 40 percent

Click here for more details.

Hillary: As far as I know, no reason to believe Obama is a Muslim

Here’s the “60 Minutes” clip of Hillary Clinton addressing whether Barack Obama is a Muslim that has the blogosphere buzzing. In particular, the last-second “as far as I know” is raising eyebrows (starting at 2:10 of this clip).

Watch the full segment, with interviews with both Democrats and a look at the Ohio primary.

Obama on his pastor

With all the controversy over last night’s debate exchange about the connections between Louis Farrakhan and Barack Obama’s pastor, it’s worth reviewing what the candidate had to say about the topic during a meeting in Cleveland on Sunday with Jewish leaders. From the transcript provided by the Obama campaign: Read the rest

Obama reaches out to Jewish leaders

We’ve received a rough transcript that came from the Obama campaign of a closed meeting that the candidate held Sunday in Cleveland with about 100 Jewish communal leaders. Whoever recorded the remarks was only able to get Obama’s answers, not the actual questions from the audience.

For the most part, Obama sought to reassure the audience — on Israel, Iran, his church, his pastor, his foreign policy advisers, his religion. At the same time, he picked a few spots to push back against some of his critics in the Jewish community (see the stuff about the folly of equating pro-Likud with pro-Israel and the ability of Israelis to conducts a robust debate over security/diplomatic strategy).

Here are the key quotes (the summaries in all caps are mine, but not the typos): Read the rest