
Poll: 2 Years After Oct. 7, Majority Palestinians Say Hamas Was Right to Attack — 86% Deny Civilian Atrocities
Two years after the October 7, 2023, massacre that left more than 1,200 Israelis dead and hundreds abducted, new survey findings from the Ramallah-based Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research indicate that 53% of Palestinian respondents still say Hamas was right to launch the assault. The polling suggests support is strongest in Judea and Samaria at 59%, while 44% in Gaza express approval—an uptick from previous measurements. The results arrive despite extensive, widely disseminated evidence documenting the brutal nature of the raid and its aftermath, and they point to a hardening of attitudes rather than the erosion of support that many outside observers had predicted would follow prolonged conflict and devastation.
Perhaps more striking is the degree of denial: when asked directly whether Hamas committed the atrocities that were publicly shown and verified by multiple forms of evidence, 86% of respondents answered “no,” with just 10% saying “yes.” This overwhelming rejection of documented facts reflects the depth of polarization and the persistence of narratives that conflict with on-the-ground footage and testimonies. It also underscores the steep challenge that mediators face in attempting to build a common factual foundation on which to negotiate a durable ceasefire, transition governance, or contemplate long-term reconstruction.
The poll further points to substantial political momentum for Hamas. If legislative elections were held now, 44% of likely voters said they would back Hamas compared to 30% for Fatah. In a hypothetical presidential contest, Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal would hold a commanding advantage over Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. Respondents also expressed relatively high satisfaction with Hamas’s wartime performance, with approval crossing the 50% threshold across territories and notably higher in Judea and Samaria than in Gaza itself—a divergence that has appeared in previous polling waves as well.
On questions of strategy, a plurality of respondents endorsed “armed struggle” as the most effective route to end the conflict and achieve statehood, outpacing support for negotiations or nonviolent protest. Nearly 70% said they oppose disarming Hamas even as a condition of a permanent end to hostilities—an outlook fundamentally at odds with the demobilization requirements embedded in current diplomatic proposals. Together, these findings depict a public that remains deeply radicalized, skeptical of compromise, and oriented toward confrontation—conditions that complicate every pathway being discussed for post-war governance and regional stability.
(BB/VFI News)
“Turn from evil and do good; seek peace and pursue it.” – Psalm 34:14