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Israeli opposition leads new poll as Netanyahu allies consider voting restrictions

Created at 16 Jul · 12:16 PM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

A new poll indicates that an opposition bloc could secure a narrow parliamentary majority in Israel's upcoming October election, while allies of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are reportedly exploring measures to restrict voting access for potential anti-Netanyahu voters abroad and in certain facilities.

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Key Numbers

61Knesset seats for opposition bloc
120Total seats in the Knesset
22Projected seats for Likud party
21Projected seats for Yashar party
15Projected seats for Together alliance
11Projected seats for Democrats
10Projected seats for Yisrael Beiteinu
4Projected seats for Hendel/Tropper alliance
8Projected seats for United Torah Judaism
7Projected seats for Shas
7Projected seats for Jewish Power
6Projected seats for Religious Zionism
5Projected seats for Hadash-Ta'al
4Projected seats for Ra'am
37,000Estimated number of people affected by polling station change

Who's Involved

Benjamin Netanyahu
Prime Minister of Israel
Gadi Eisenkot
Former Israeli army chief of staff and leader of Yashar party
Naftali Bennett
Former Prime Minister and leader of Together alliance
Yair Golan
Leader of the Democrats party
Avigdor Lieberman
Leader of Yisrael Beiteinu party
Yoaz Hendel
Leader of a new alliance
Chili Tropper
Leader of a new alliance
Itamar Ben Gvir
National Security Minister and leader of Jewish Power party
Bezalel Smotrich
Finance Minister and leader of Religious Zionism party
Miri Regev
Transportation Minister
Benny Gantz
Former Defense Minister and leader of Blue and White party
Israeli opposition leads new poll as Netanyahu allies consider voting restrictions

↳ Why This Matters

The upcoming Israeli election could see a significant shift in political power, with opposition parties potentially forming a government. Meanwhile, proposed voting restrictions raise concerns about the fairness and integrity of the electoral process.

Key facts

  • A new poll suggests an Israeli opposition bloc could win 61 seats in the upcoming October election.
  • Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party is projected to win 22 seats, while Gadi Eisenkot's Yashar party is forecast to win 21.
  • Netanyahu's allies are reportedly considering restricting incoming flights before the election to limit potential anti-Netanyahu voters.
  • A Knesset committee has advanced a measure to eliminate polling stations in retirement and assisted-living facilities.

A new poll indicates that a bloc of Israeli parties aiming to oust Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu could secure a slim majority of 61 seats in the upcoming October election. The Channel 13 survey, broadcast on Wednesday, showed the opposition capable of forming a government without relying on Palestinian-majority parties, a significant development after more than a month without such polling.

Former Israeli army chief Gadi Eisenkot's Yashar party is projected to win 21 seats, placing it narrowly behind Netanyahu's Likud party, which is forecast to secure 22 seats. Other opposition parties, including former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett's Together alliance (15 seats), Yair Golan's Democrats (11 seats), and Avigdor Lieberman's Yisrael Beiteinu (10 seats), along with a new alliance led by Yoaz Hendel and Chili Tropper (4 seats), would contribute to the opposition's potential majority.

Conversely, Netanyahu's current far-right and ultra-Orthodox coalition partners are projected to fall short. United Torah Judaism is expected to win eight seats, Shas and Jewish Power seven each, and Religious Zionism six. Palestinian parties Hadash-Ta'al and Ra'am are forecast to win five and four seats, respectively. Parties like Balad and former Defense Minister Benny Gantz's Blue and White did not meet the electoral threshold in this poll.

The poll results emerge as allies of Prime Minister Netanyahu are reportedly exploring measures to restrict voting access. Senior officials in Transportation Minister Miri Regev's office have discussed limiting incoming flights immediately before the election, specifically charter services, with the belief that tens of thousands of Israelis living abroad might return to vote against Netanyahu. Additionally, a Knesset committee has advanced a measure to end the provision of polling stations in retirement and assisted-living facilities, a change that could affect up to 37,000 voters from an age group that largely opposes the current prime minister.

Frequently asked questions

A new poll suggests that an opposition bloc could secure a narrow majority of 61 seats in the Knesset, potentially forming a government without relying on Palestinian-majority parties.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party is projected to win 22 seats, while former Israeli army chief Gadi Eisenkot's Yashar party is forecast to win 21 seats.

Allies of Prime Minister Netanyahu are reportedly discussing limiting incoming flights before the election and ending polling stations in retirement and assisted-living facilities.

This indicates a stronger potential for a stable majority government for the opposition, as it would not depend on the support of parties that have historically been outside the main governing coalitions.

What Happens Next

01The Israeli election is scheduled to take place on October 27.
02Further polls will indicate the evolving public sentiment.
03The Knesset will vote on proposed measures to restrict voting access.

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Cadence

How It Developed

A new poll shows an opposition bloc capable of forming a government in Israel's October election.
The opposition bloc is projected to win 61 seats in the Knesset.
Former Israeli army chief Gadi Eisenkot's Yashar party is projected to win 21 seats.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party is projected to win 22 seats.
Allies of Netanyahu are reportedly exploring ways to restrict voting access.
Measures discussed include limiting incoming flights before the election.
A Knesset committee advanced a measure to end polling stations in retirement facilities.

Sources

T1
Israeli opposition tops new poll as Netanyahu allies explore voting restrictionsMiddle East Eye

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