Politics | the Jewish vote Jews Like Obama Far Better Than Lieberman, McCain It's not even close By Jonas Oransky Posted Jul 22, 2008 1:11 PM CDT Copied In this May 22, 2003 photo, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., left, and Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., prepare to testify before a public hearing. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) Despite Barack Obama’s much debated Jewish problems—and Joe Lieberman’s place of pride as unofficial Jewish spokesman—the Dem is viewed favorably by 60% of American Jews and unfavorably by only 34%, while the Independent scores 37% and 48% (McCain comes in at 34% and 57%). The numbers are part of a poll by new progressive Jewish group J Street—which also notes that the demographic prefers liberal MoveOn to right-leaning AIPAC. Obama’s overall Jewish support figure is 62% to McCain's 32%, a smaller spread than John Kerry or Al Gore had on George Bush, the Huffington Post reports. It probably can’t help that Jeremiah Wright is viewed unfavorably by 68%. But there’s room for growth, as fully 90% of American Jews say the US is currently on the wrong track. Read These Next Israel's 'decapitation' strategy in Iran carries risks. Democrats walk out on Bondi's Epstein files briefing. Woman arrested in Iowa murder that puzzled cops for 15 years. America's top five dog breeds. Report an error