
Poll: 42% of Likud Voters Weighing or Have Decided to Back Different Party in Fall
Forty-two percent of Israelis who voted for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party in the previous election are either considering or have decided to vote for a different party in the fall Knesset elections, a Channel 12 poll released on Friday, May 8, revealed. Fifty-eight percent of Likud's 2022 voters said they will support the party again at the ballot box. Among those defecting or undecided, 37% cited the failure to prevent Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack as the chief reason.
An additional 23% pointed to legislation the government is trying to pass, granting blanket exemptions from military service for ultra-Orthodox yeshiva students. Fourteen percent named Netanyahu's personal conduct, while 13% cited divisions in Israeli society, and another 13% said they were unsure. The poll showed that 10% of former Likud voters will support the Together slate that former prime minister Naftali Bennett formed with Opposition Leader Yair Lapid; 6% will vote for former IDF chief of staff Gadi Eisenkot's centrist Yashar party; and 4% will back Avigdor Liberman's secular right-wing Yisrael Beytenu.
Asked whether Netanyahu should run in the next election, 64% of those who voted Likud previously said yes, while 30% said he should retire. Looking ahead to a post-Netanyahu Likud, 10% pointed to former Mossad chief Yossi Cohen, 9% favored Economy Minister Nir Barkat, and 8% Defense Minister Israel Katz; 45% chose none of the above. Sixty-seven percent said Netanyahu's son Yair should not be on the Likud electoral slate. Israeli parliamentary elections are set to be held in October at the latest.
(TOI/VFI News)
“There are many plans in a man's heart, nevertheless the counsel of the Lord—that will stand.” – Proverbs 19:21