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Poll Finds ‘Israeli’ Voters Have Less Confidence in Major Parties

Poll Finds ‘Israeli’ Voters Have Less Confidence in Major Parties
folder_open«Israeli» Elections access_timeone year ago
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By Staff, Agencies

A new poll conducted by Panel Politics that was released on Thursday showed that the Zionist entity’s largest parties are losing voters to smaller fractions ahead of the November elections.

The right-wing Likud party led by Opposition Leader Benjamin Netanyahu got 31 seats against 32 last week, while centrist Yesh Atid headed by Zionist Prime Minister Yair Lapid won 23 seats dropping down from 25.

Meanwhile left-wing Meretz gained a seat securing five in total following its primaries this week, where Zehava Galon regained party leadership after returning from retirement. Otzma Yehudit and Labor also gained a seat each, with eight and seven respectively. 

Overall, Lapid’s bloc won 56 seats, while Netanyahu and his allies got 58 seats, according to the survey. Neither of them is predicted to get the majority of seats in the 120-seat Zionist entity’s parliament [the Knesset] to form a government.

Earlier this week, Netanyahu called for a unity deal between right-wing Otzma Yehudit and Religious Zionist parties, with the poll showing the latest would not pass the electoral threshold on its own. The two parties ran a shared ticket in the Tel Aviv entity’s 2021 elections, but announced running separately in the upcoming vote on November 1.

Over 18 percent of Zionist voters are still undecided, according to the poll, which included 715 respondents.

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