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This Jewish Gen-Z-er wants to be the next progressive pro-Israel congressman

Joe Vogel identifies as Jewish, Latino and LGBTQ while focusing on bread-and-butter issues in his Maryland district

WASHINGTON (JTA) — At least twice while campaigning in the small towns of the western stretch of Maryland’s 6th District, Joe Vogel headed to Shabbat services.

Synagogues in Cumberland and Frederick were only too happy to accommodate when his campaign called ahead and said the Jewish candidate wanted to stop by on a Saturday morning. In fact, the Frederick congregation had a favor to ask of the youngest delegate ever elected to the state House: Could he lift up a Torah scroll?

“It’s a slightly older congregation and they needed someone that could do the hagbah,” Vogel recalled, referring to the delicate-yet-daunting act of lifting the Torah scroll and displaying it to the congregation. “I had not done that since my Bar Mitzvah. I was a little nervous to drop the Torah in front of, you know, a few dozen folks.”

Under Jewish tradition, dropping the Torah could require fasting. For Vogel, who was elected in 2022 at age 25, an accident could cost votes, too. But the Jewish day school graduate pulled the feat off, continuing his campaign without incident.

That was fortunate, because even a small margin could make a difference in Maryland’s 6th Congressional District, where a crowded pack of Democrats are vying on Tuesday’s primary for the seat being vacated by Rep. David Trone, who is running for the Senate.

If successful in the primary and then again in November, Vogel would become the second-youngest member of Congress, after Florida’s Maxwell Frost, a progressive Democrat who was born less than two weeks after him in January 1997.

Polls ahead of Tuesday’s primary show that Vogel is a frontrunner, alongside April McClain Delaney, a former senior Commerce Department official who is the wife of John Delaney, Trone’s predecessor.

The Democratic establishment backs Delaney in the purplish 6th District, where they fear Vogel’s progressive politics may turn off rural voters. But Vogel has garnered some high-profile endorsements, including New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, for whom he once worked, and J Street, the liberal Jewish Middle East policy group, as well as some unions, including a major teachers union.

Vogel’s biography — born in Uruguay, he identifies as Jewish, LGBTQ and Latino — makes him notable on the national scene beyond his age. But his campaigning in the 6th District has been about local issues. When he knocks on doors, he told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency on Monday, people want to know about jobs, health and the environment.

“The mayor of Boonsboro, for example, talked to us about the challenges they face in their water reservoir,  and my commitment as a member of Congress to addressing those challenges,” he said. “And we’re talking about what I’ve worked on in the legislature which was mental health, responding to the fentanyl overdose epidemic, creating jobs in new industries. All of those priorities resonate with folks all over this district.”

His identity helps at times, too. “I think there are Jewish voters here in Gaithersburg,” one of the D.C. bedroom communities he represented in the state House, “who are really excited about the message of our campaign and what my leadership offers.”

Vogel attended the Charles E. Smith Jewish Day School and was active in BBYO, the international nondenominational Jewish youth movement, which he said spurred his political ambitions.

“I think about my Jewish faith and I think about the values of Tikkun Olam,” he said, referring to the Jewish precept of repairing the world that can be a watchword for progressives, “but even beyond that, this idea that we have an obligation to stand up for ourselves, I think about right now more than ever, as we see a surge in antisemitism.”

He casts himself as a progressive but with pro-Israel cred, citing New York Rep. Ritchie Torres and Florida Rep. Jared Moskowitz as models. Both are outspoken progressives on domestic issues and also are unstinting defenders of Israel, an increasingly rare combination as the progressive wing of the Democratic Party has become highly critical of Israel.

Vogel said the need to defend Israel was made especially acute by the war Hamas launched by attacking Israel on Oct. 7.

“For me, my support for Israel, it’s not political, it’s not a policy issue, it’s personal,” he said. ”I have family there. My youngest cousin just enrolled in the IDF. The last few months have been extremely challenging. And I think that now more than ever, we need young voices that are willing to stand up for Israel and stand up for the Jewish community.”

On the most contentious Israel issue of the day, President Joe Biden’s withholding of bombs to Israel contingent on whether and how it conducts an operation in Rafah, a city on the Gaza-Egypt border, Vogel acknowledged ambivalence.

“I have concerns as especially as we see the rise in threats from Iran that we saw in the last several weeks that we are jeopardizing Israel’s security by making decisions or making declarations,” he said. “But, you know, ultimately, I trust the president. I trust the president and I trust his national security team.”

Whatever happens Tuesday, a takeaway for Vogel, who grew up in a large and influential Jewish community in suburban D.C., will be the joys of small-town Jewish life. He recalled his Shabbat in Cumberland last December, and said he’s kept in touch — maintaining an attention to detail befitting a politician whose success will depend on local relationships.

“I understand that they’re hiring a new rabbi now, which is very exciting for the Cumberland community,” he said.

Recent polls suggest that Delaney may have taken the lead in the days before the primary. But Vogel, who said he knocked on 3,000 doors over the weekend, says he believes he has the momentum.

“What you’ll see tomorrow is a large amount of support for us in parts of the district that folks thought we would never really be able to gain traction,” he said. “And because we made a concerted effort, because we made an intentional effort to show up and gain support there.”

This article originally appeared on JTA.org.

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