Poll: Abbas would win in West Bank, Hamas in Gaza, if Palestinians voted today

Poll finds half Gaza residents want to leave, 63% support missile attacks on Israel while blockade in place

AP

Gaza residents are unhappy with the territory’s Islamic militant Hamas rulers and their war with Israel last summer, a new Palestinian poll released Tuesday shows.

The poll by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research showed that half of Gaza residents want to emigrate, compared to 25 percent in the West Bank.

The center’s director, Khalil Shikaki, said the 50-percent emigration figure in Gaza is higher than ever before and that among young people it is even higher, about 80 percent.

“Gaza is definitely showing tremendous frustration,” Shikaki said.

A majority, 63%, expressed dissatisfaction with “achievements compared to human and material losses” in the 2014 Gaza war. Fighting devastated parts of Gaza and reconstruction has been slow, causing many there to ask if it was worth it.

Some 2,100 Palestinians were killed and tens of thousands more left homeless, according to Palestinian and UN tallies. Israel, which lost 66 soldiers and six civilians in the conflict, said half of Palestinians were combatants and that the high civilian toll in Gaza was due to fighters there embedding their military infrastructure in residential areas.

Of those polled, 63% said they support launching rockets at Israel while a blockade is in place. The same number said they favor indirect talks between Hamas and Israel to negotiate a long-term truce in exchange for lifting the blockade.

Israel and Egypt imposed the blockade on Gaza after Hamas seized the coastal territory from forces loyal to Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in 2007, arguing it prevents Hamas from getting more weapons.

Hamas has ruled Gaza with an iron fist since, leaving Abbas governing parts of the West Bank.

Only 30% said they can criticize Hamas without fear. In the West Bank, just 32% said they could freely criticize Abbas.

The poll found that if free elections were held today with just Abbas and Hamas’ leader Ismail Haniyeh competing, Hamas would win in Gaza and Abbas in the West Bank, both by slim margins.

The Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research polled 1,200 people in early June for the report, with a 3-percent margin of error.

June 10, 2015 | 4 Comments »

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4 Comments / 4 Comments

  1. @ babushka:
    As long as they keep the farce going somebody is benefiting from it financially. Just follow the money.
    Remember President Truman? GIVE THEM HELL HARRY.
    They do not want peace. They want total destruction. Total obliteration of Israel and what it represents.
    Progress, hard work, learning, scientific creation. All the virtues the South Syrians lack. They were called South Syrians before they invented the Palestinian nationality
    thanks to the advise the Russians gave Arafat.

  2. Abbas would win in West Bank

    Not if he were opposed by someone who explicitly campaigned on exterminating the Jews. There is literally zero chance for peace, but the peace process will forever endure. Even while Hamas was bombing Jewish civilians we were told that the peace process must be maintained, delusion so bizarre that it transcends surrealism.

  3. The underlying fear is that Hamas would win in both regions, hardening opposition to Israel; both are dangerous, as the intransigence of Abbas has repeatedly demonstrated.