In a post-Netanyahu era, Itamar Ben-Gvir leads right-wing candidate support. The National Camp and Likud see minor seat changes. Survey includes 500 respondents.
"The government cannot continue to evade its responsibility towards the citizens of Israel, the families of the fallen, and the families of the hostages."
Right-wing politicians hint at political cooperation and the return of former PM Naftali Bennett in a bid to oust Netanyahu at the next elections.
According to the poll, the National Unity led by Benny Gantz would garner 25 mandates, while the Likud led by Benjamin Netanyahu would yield 21 mandates.
Conducted between July 3-4, 600 individuals participated in the survey, representing a sample of the adult population in Israel, 18 and above, both Jews and Arabs. The margin of error is 4.2%.
A united right-wing party would be the largest party if a vote were held today; Bennett beats all others in premiership suitability.
'We should bring 1 million Jews over the next decade' said Bennett; Comptroller checking if Iran hacked PMO, drones, home front command.
“We took care of all citizens in Israel and did not put one sector in front of the other,” Bennet said in a lengthy post on X.
In this piece I will measure the NNC model within the framework of the current political climate, including a current scenario poll and the political reality of post-October 7 Israel.
A new Channel 12 poll sees Netanyahu's Likud narrow the gap with Gantz's National Unity Party, with more Israelis seeing the incumbent prime minister as more suitable for the PMO.