
The Israel Democracy Institute's "Israeli Voice Index" survey, published this morning (Wednesday), shows that 581% of the public think that none of the blocs will be able to form a stable government after the elections.
Only a third believe that there is a high chance that after the elections the tie between the blocs will be broken and a stable government supported by the majority of Knesset members will be formed.
The breakdown between opposition and coalition voters shows that while most coalition voters (72%) believe that the chance of forming a stable government after the elections is low, among opposition party voters only 40% believe so - with 50% thinking that it will be possible to form a stable government.
52% of the public believe that the right has a higher chance of forming a government, while only 9% think that the center-left bloc has a higher chance. 13% estimate that both blocs have the same chance of forming a government, while 16% think that neither bloc has a chance.
A breakdown of the responses by party shows that voters of the opposition parties are more confident in forming a stable government after the elections, compared to voters of the center-left parties, where only a minority believe they have the ability to form a government after the elections.
Most Israelis (62.51% of respondents) are confident or think they will vote for the parties they voted for in the previous elections.
At the top are voters for the ultra-Orthodox parties, with 94% of United Torah Judaism voters continuing to vote for them in the upcoming elections, and among Shas voters, 91%. At the bottom are Yamina voters with 32.5%. It should be noted that the data was collected on the eve of Bennett's retirement announcement.
Compared to a survey conducted by the Israel Democracy Institute last May, the current survey shows volatility among New Hope voters, who rose 231% this month in confidence that they would vote for the same party again, and the same rate of increase (231%) was also recorded among Yisrael Beiteinu and Shas voters.
The Ra'am party suffered the largest decline in voter confidence this month, dropping from 77% who reported that they intended to vote for it again to only 54%.
63% feel that there is a party they could vote for without hesitation and with a whole heart, compared to a quarter (26%) who responded negatively. Confidence in voting for a party with a whole heart is higher among Jews (65%) compared to Arabs (48%).