Here News poll: Bibi jumps to 35. Lieberman drops to 4. Who has a government?

June Green
April 6, 2022   
Photo: 
Tomer Neuberg/FLASH90
Is Israel on the road to more elections? A 'Kan News' poll conducted by pollster Dudi Hasid and the Kantar Institute and published this evening (Wednesday) shows that the Likud party led by Benjamin Netanyahu is jumping to 35 seats, compared to the elections a year ago - when the party received 30 seats. Cleaning for Passover: What do you know about the rules for maintaining the home gas system? On the other hand, the coalition parties are down to 56 seats. According to the poll, Yesh Atid, led by Yair Lapid, is gaining slightly from the elections - and rising from 17 seats to 19. Yamina, led by Naftali Bennett, is falling from 7 seats to 6. Blue and White, led by Benny Gantz, is maintaining 8 seats, Meretz, led by Nitzan Horowitz, is falling from 6 seats to 5 seats. Gideon Sa'ar's New Hope is also losing a seat and gaining 5 seats. The Labor Party, led by Merav Michaeli, lost two seats from the elections and only receives 5. Avigdor Lieberman's Yisrael Beytenu is weakening by 3 seats and is gaining only four in the current poll. According to the poll, Religious Zionism, led by Bezalel Smotrich, is gaining from 6 seats to 8. The Shas party drops from 9 to 8 seats in the poll. United Torah Judaism maintains stability with 7 seats. The Joint List remains with 6 seats, as does Mansour Abbas's Ra'am, with 4 seats. The result: the current coalition 56, the Netanyahu bloc 58, the joint 6. When asked whether you knew about Idit Silman's decision to withdraw from the coalition due to the High Court ruling on the prohibition of bringing leaven into hospitals on Passover, 79% of those surveyed answered yes. When asked whether you support the coalition chairman's decision to resign, 38% of those surveyed answered that they support it. 43% of those surveyed expressed opposition to the move, 19% had no opinion. Among right-wing voters, 61% respondents supported Silman's resignation from the government, and among left-wing voters, only 15% respondents supported him. The survey was conducted by Kantar today (Wednesday - 06.04.22), according to an online sample of 550 men and women aged 18 and over, including the Arab sector. The number of people asked to answer the survey is 3,457 people and the maximum sampling error is 4.4%.

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