Current Knesset seats in [brackets]
Panels conducted a poll 552 people with a 4.2% margin of error that was broadcast by Channel 12 on April 1 2019.
31 [29] Likud (Netanyahu)
30 [11] Blue & White (Gantz, Lapid, Yaalon & Ashkenazi)
09 [18] Labor (Gabbai)
09 [05] Hadash-Taal (Odeh & Tibi)
06 [06] United Torah Judaism (Litzman)
06 [05] Meretz (Zandberg)
06 [03] Hayamin Hehadash (Bennett & Shaked)
05 [07] Shas (Deri)
05 [05] United Right List (Peretz, Smotrich & Ben Gvir)
05 [–-] Zehut (Feiglin)
04 [10] Kulanu (Kahlon)
04 [05] Yisrael Beitenu (Liberman)
Under 3.25% electoral threshold:
2.2% [01] Gesher (Orly Levy)
2.1% [08] Raam-Balad (Abbas)
Under 1%:
00 [01] Tzomet (Oren Hazan)
00 [–-] Magen (Gal Hirsch) and others
66 [66] Current Right-Religious Coalition+Y.B.
54 [54] Current Center-Left-Arab Opposition-Y.B
Additional Questions:
Who is more suited to be Prime Minister?
53% Netanyahu, 30% Gantz, 17% Don’t know
Who won the last round in the south?
36% Don’t know, 34% Hamas, 30% Israel
I don’t know alot about the Arab parties, so can I ask; why is Raam-Balad polling so bad?
Ra’m is an Islamic party and most younger Israeli Arabs aren’t THAT religious. Balad is the ultranationalist Arab party and has really turned off any Arabs who have any relationship with any Jews. Since 2006, they have done very badly and many Arabs associate Balad with Zoabi who was a complete clown and embarassment to them. When she ran for mayor of Nazareth – the biggest Arab town – she got walloped. Tibi, despite what Jews think of him, is much more respectable and respected as a politician. Tibi’s main reason for splitting was to disassociate from the nuts in Balad.
does anyone see in these polls any evidence that Rav Mazuz’s recommendation for Yachad’s voters to turn to UTJ materalising, do they believe that it might do in the coming days, is it going somewhere else, or had it already dissipated to other parties before the pronouncement
He barely had a third of a seat’s worth of voters. They might have gone 90-100% to UTJ and not significantly made a difference in number of seats.