A banner depicts Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich during a demonstration against the government's judicial overhaul in Tel Aviv. Reuters
A banner depicts Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich during a demonstration against the government's judicial overhaul in Tel Aviv. Reuters
A banner depicts Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich during a demonstration against the government's judicial overhaul in Tel Aviv. Reuters
A banner depicts Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich during a demonstration against the government's judicial overhaul in

Israel's Netanyahu rapidly losing popularity, new poll shows


Thomas Helm
  • English
  • Arabic

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party would lose 12 seats if an election was held today, a low that the party has not seen in almost two decades, according to a poll released by Israeli news outlet Channel 12.

Coalition partners would also lose a significant share of the vote, giving the government a total of just 46 seats, well below the 61 needed to secure a majority. Today’s coalition currently holds 64 seats.

According to the poll, opposition party National Unity, headed by Benny Gantz, would more than double its presence in parliament with a total of 29 seats, almost as much as Likud’s current tally of 32.

The devastating figures come as Mr Netanyahu faces serious questions from both politicians and the public over his handling of Israel’s current security crisis and his divisive push for judicial reforms that have sparked the largest protest movement in Israeli history.

Anger has been rising at home and abroad over Israel’s treatment last week of Muslim worshippers who barricaded themselves inside the prayer hall of Al Aqsa Mosque.

  • Palestinians clean up Al Aqsa Mosque compound after Israeli police stormed the site. Reuters
    Palestinians clean up Al Aqsa Mosque compound after Israeli police stormed the site. Reuters
  • Palestinians clear the damaged furniture from the mosque compound. Reuters
    Palestinians clear the damaged furniture from the mosque compound. Reuters
  • Israeli police say the attack was in response to rioting. Reuters
    Israeli police say the attack was in response to rioting. Reuters
  • Palestinian worshippers pray as Israeli police officials stand guard at Al Aqsa Mosque compound. AP
    Palestinian worshippers pray as Israeli police officials stand guard at Al Aqsa Mosque compound. AP
  • A worshipper sweeps the debris in the aftermath of the attack by Israeli police. AP
    A worshipper sweeps the debris in the aftermath of the attack by Israeli police. AP
  • Israeli Border Police near the Damascus Gate. AP
    Israeli Border Police near the Damascus Gate. AP
  • The operation by Israeli police has been condemned across the region. Reuters
    The operation by Israeli police has been condemned across the region. Reuters
  • Palestinians pray inside Al Aqsa Mosque compound. Reuters
    Palestinians pray inside Al Aqsa Mosque compound. Reuters
  • A Palestinian worshipper is led away by Israeli police at Al Aqsa Mosque compound. AP
    A Palestinian worshipper is led away by Israeli police at Al Aqsa Mosque compound. AP
  • A Palestinian worshipper is surrounded by Israeli policemen at the compound. Reuters
    A Palestinian worshipper is surrounded by Israeli policemen at the compound. Reuters

The worshippers said they were defending the holy site from Israeli settlers seeking access to the sacred area on which the mosque sits.

Israeli officials say that they were rioting and stockpiling weapons to use against settlers.

Al Aqsa is the third holiest site in Islam, while Jews revere the site as the location of biblical era temples.

On Sunday, Israeli Police commissioner Kobi Shabtai defended police actions to clear the site but admitted that officers used “a little too much force”.

The scenes led to soaring tensions with Palestinians and rocket attacks from militant groups in Lebanon, Syria and the Gaza Strip on Thursday, prompting retaliatory strikes from Israel.

On Monday, two Israeli soldiers were wounded by gunfire in the flashpoint West Bank city of Nablus, the military said.

Later, a Palestinian was killed during an Israeli military raid near the West Bank city of Jericho, the Palestinian health ministry said.

Also on Monday, the mother of two British-Israeli sisters killed in a shooting in the occupied West Bank on Friday died from injuries sustained in the attack.

Later in the day, an Italian tourist died in a car ramming in Tel Aviv. Seven others were injured, all tourists.

A man inspects damage at his house left by a rocket following Israeli air strikes in Al Qulaylah, on the outskirts of the city of Tyre, south of the Lebanese capital Beirut on April 7. AFP
A man inspects damage at his house left by a rocket following Israeli air strikes in Al Qulaylah, on the outskirts of the city of Tyre, south of the Lebanese capital Beirut on April 7. AFP

Opposition leader Yair Lapid said he was “even more worried” about the situation after attending a security briefing on Sunday at the Prime Minister's invitation.

In a televised statement, Mr Lapid, whose Yesh Atid party is also lagging in support according to Channel 12's poll, said Mr Netanyahu “needs to announce that he has taken the firing of Defence Minister Yoav Gallant off the table, to admit that he cannot rely on his Cabinet and to create a small, stable security forum to deal with the situation”.

“What our enemies see in front of them, in all arenas, is an incompetent government. A cabinet no one trusts,” he said.

Mr Netanyahu said he was firing Mr Gallant after the defence minister said publicly last month that the judicial reforms posed a “tangible” threat to national security, citing threats from a growing number of elite Israeli reservists to boycott service in protest and growing intelligence that Israel’s enemies were seeking to exploit the domestic turmoil.

  • Israeli police officials detain a protester during clashes after a demonstration against the government's judicial overhaul in Tel Aviv. Getty
    Israeli police officials detain a protester during clashes after a demonstration against the government's judicial overhaul in Tel Aviv. Getty
  • Mounted police disperse protesters in Tel Aviv. AP
    Mounted police disperse protesters in Tel Aviv. AP
  • Protesters stand with their arms up as police fire a water cannon in Tel Aviv. Reuters
    Protesters stand with their arms up as police fire a water cannon in Tel Aviv. Reuters
  • Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stands on the floor of the Knesset, the country's parliament in Jerusalem. AFP
    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stands on the floor of the Knesset, the country's parliament in Jerusalem. AFP
  • Mounted police officers outside Israel's parliament in Jerusalem. AFP
    Mounted police officers outside Israel's parliament in Jerusalem. AFP
  • Security guards prevent a protester from entering the parliament building. AP
    Security guards prevent a protester from entering the parliament building. AP
  • Opposition leader and former prime minister Yair Lapid speaks outside the parliament in Jerusalem. AFP
    Opposition leader and former prime minister Yair Lapid speaks outside the parliament in Jerusalem. AFP
  • Israelis scuffles with police outside the parliament in Jerusalem. AP
    Israelis scuffles with police outside the parliament in Jerusalem. AP
  • Israeli flags being waved outside the parliament in Jerusalem. Bloomberg
    Israeli flags being waved outside the parliament in Jerusalem. Bloomberg
  • Protesters hold up Israeli flags and placards at the Knesset. AFP
    Protesters hold up Israeli flags and placards at the Knesset. AFP
  • Passengers wait for their flights during a strike at the Ben Gurion International Airport near Tel Aviv. AFP
    Passengers wait for their flights during a strike at the Ben Gurion International Airport near Tel Aviv. AFP
  • Travellers look at a monitor displaying delayed flights. Reuters
    Travellers look at a monitor displaying delayed flights. Reuters
  • Protesters hold flags aloft in Jerusalem. Reuters
    Protesters hold flags aloft in Jerusalem. Reuters
  • Flights from Israel's main Ben Gurion Airport were suspended as a general strike against the government's plans spread across several sectors. AP
    Flights from Israel's main Ben Gurion Airport were suspended as a general strike against the government's plans spread across several sectors. AP
  • Demonstrators are demanding that the government ditches the judicial shake-up after protests overnight in which about 600,000 people took to the streets of Israel. AP
    Demonstrators are demanding that the government ditches the judicial shake-up after protests overnight in which about 600,000 people took to the streets of Israel. AP
  • Protesters gather outside the Knesset as part of mass protests in Jerusalem. EPA
    Protesters gather outside the Knesset as part of mass protests in Jerusalem. EPA
  • Israeli police use water cannon to disperse demonstrators blocking a road in Tel Aviv. AP
    Israeli police use water cannon to disperse demonstrators blocking a road in Tel Aviv. AP
  • The protesters in Tel Aviv hold Israeli flags as they gather around a bonfire. AFP
    The protesters in Tel Aviv hold Israeli flags as they gather around a bonfire. AFP
  • Tens of thousands of Israelis took to the streets after Mr Netanyahu fired his Mr Gallant for objecting to the judicial reforms. AFP
    Tens of thousands of Israelis took to the streets after Mr Netanyahu fired his Mr Gallant for objecting to the judicial reforms. AFP
  • Demonstrations erupted in January after the coalition government announced its package of changes. AFP
    Demonstrations erupted in January after the coalition government announced its package of changes. AFP
  • Thousands of protesters clash with the police as they block a highway in Tel Aviv. AFP
    Thousands of protesters clash with the police as they block a highway in Tel Aviv. AFP
  • A protester shouts anti-government slogans in Jerusalem after Israel's Defence Minister was dismissed. Reuters
    A protester shouts anti-government slogans in Jerusalem after Israel's Defence Minister was dismissed. Reuters
  • Demonstrators outside Mr Netanyahu's residence in Jerusalem. AFP
    Demonstrators outside Mr Netanyahu's residence in Jerusalem. AFP
  • Members of security forces form a barricade to prevent protesters from blocking a road in Tel Aviv. Reuters
    Members of security forces form a barricade to prevent protesters from blocking a road in Tel Aviv. Reuters
  • A violent scene during a rally in Tel Aviv. AFP
    A violent scene during a rally in Tel Aviv. AFP
  • Protesters rampage through the streets in Tel Aviv. AFP
    Protesters rampage through the streets in Tel Aviv. AFP
  • Police use a water cannon on violent protesters in Tel Aviv. AFP
    Police use a water cannon on violent protesters in Tel Aviv. AFP
  • Israelis block a road in Tel Aviv. AP
    Israelis block a road in Tel Aviv. AP

Mr Gallant has still not formally been removed from his position, and appeared alongside the prime minister during a visit to the scene of Friday's shooting in the northern West Bank.

The damaging poll results come as more cracks appear within the coalition, the most right-wing in Israeli history.

On Monday, seven government ministers staged a march through the West Bank, including far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and Minister of National Security Itamar Ben-Gvir, according to Channel 12.

Security officials have privately warned that the march will further strain Israeli forces in the area, which they say are already “stretched thin”.

The route of the march passes close to the Palestinian town of Huwara, where Israeli settlers went on a rampage in February, setting fire to Arab homes and property, after two Israeli brothers were killed outside the town earlier.

Mr Smotrich drew worldwide condemnation for later calling for the town to be “wiped out”, and subsequently apologised for his comments.

The Finance Minister, who heads the Religious Zionism party, joined forces with Mr Ben-Gvir’s Otzma Yehudit party during the last elections.

They won 14 seats, and joined Mr Netanyahu’s coalition to much criticism among liberal Israelis given the pair’s far-right manifestos.

Following his meeting with Mr Netanyahu on Sunday, Mr Lapid labelled Mr Ben-Gvir a “TikTok clown who has lost the trust of the police” and called on the prime minister to remove Mr Smotrich from a second position he holds in the Defence Ministry.

Channel 12’s poll on Sunday also showed declining public support for the far-right alliance, which the broadcaster said would lose three seats in an election.

The survey gathered data from 699 respondents, 100 of whom were not Jewish.

Two other polls published at the end of March also predicted a drop in support for Likud, and a surge in popularity for National Unity.

Tips for newlyweds to better manage finances

All couples are unique and have to create a financial blueprint that is most suitable for their relationship, says Vijay Valecha, chief investment officer at Century Financial. He offers his top five tips for couples to better manage their finances.

Discuss your assets and debts: When married, it’s important to understand each other’s personal financial situation. It’s necessary to know upfront what each party brings to the table, as debts and assets affect spending habits and joint loan qualifications. Discussing all aspects of their finances as a couple prevents anyone from being blindsided later.

Decide on the financial/saving goals: Spouses should independently list their top goals and share their lists with one another to shape a joint plan. Writing down clear goals will help them determine how much to save each month, how much to put aside for short-term goals, and how they will reach their long-term financial goals.

Set a budget: A budget can keep the couple be mindful of their income and expenses. With a monthly budget, couples will know exactly how much they can spend in a category each month, how much they have to work with and what spending areas need to be evaluated.

Decide who manages what: When it comes to handling finances, it’s a good idea to decide who manages what. For example, one person might take on the day-to-day bills, while the other tackles long-term investments and retirement plans.

Money date nights: Talking about money should be a healthy, ongoing conversation and couples should not wait for something to go wrong. They should set time aside every month to talk about future financial decisions and see the progress they’ve made together towards accomplishing their goals.

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Europe’s rearming plan
  • Suspend strict budget rules to allow member countries to step up defence spending
  • Create new "instrument" providing €150 billion of loans to member countries for defence investment
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  • Engage the bloc's European Investment Bank to drop limits on lending to defence firms
  • Create a savings and investments union to help companies access capital
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Updated: April 10, 2023, 5:37 PM