Haaretz Poll: Unified Center-right Party Would Beat Netanyahu’s Likud

Survey shows party led by former Likud minister Sa’ar, ex-IDF chief Ashkenazi and centrist leader Kahlon would topple Netanyahu if elections were held today.

By Yossi Verter , HAARETZ

Dialog survey for Haaretz shows prospective list breaking up right's domination

Survey shows party led by former Likud minister Sa’ar, ex-IDF chief Ashkenazi and centrist leader Kahlon would topple Netanyahu if elections were held today.

A public opinion poll held this week suggests the Israeli public is ready for a political upheaval.

The poll, conducted for Haaretz by Dialog, under the supervision on Tel Aviv University Prof. Camil Fuchs, suggests that a new party headed by former IDF chief of staff Gabi Ashkenazi, former Likud minister Gideon Sa’ar and Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon (Kulanu) would get the largest number of Knesset seats if elections were held this week.

Dialog survey for Haaretz shows prospective list breaking up right’s dominationHaaretz
The poll did not say who would be the new party’s chairman.

The virtual list beats Likud by one Knesset seat, 23 to 22. It draws to its ranks five seats from Likud and seven from Yesh Atid, out of the 20 seats the previous poll predicted for that party. It also takes quite a few votes from the two rightist parties Habayit Hayehudi and Yisrael Beiteinu.

The new list does not take any votes away from Zionist Union, which loses nine Knesset seats, plunging to 15 in both the previous and current polls.

According to this survey, if elections were held now Likud would not only cease being the largest party, but, more significantly, the right wing bloc of Likud, Habayit Hayehudi and Yisrael Beiteinu would lose a total of seven Knesset seats, getting 37 instead of 44. The ultra-Orthodox bloc of 14 MKs would not give Netanyahu enough mandates to form a majority.

In contrast, the new party would be able to form a coalition with all the parties, except for the Joint Arab List, Meretz and possibly Habayit Hayehudi.

The previous poll predicted that Kulanu, headed by Kahlon, would get seven Knesset seats in an election. A prospective list led by Sa’ar, Ashkenazi and Kahlon, with its 23 seats, gets 16 more than the seven predicted for Kahlon’s? party in the earlier survey.

Kahlon and Sa’ar are close friends. They would classify themselves as right-center of the political map, or “soft right.” Ashkenazi has not yet joined the political fray, but as far as is known, he leans more to the left than the former two.

There is also the question of ego: Which of the three would be No. 1 and the party’s candidate for prime minister.

March 24, 2016 | 2 Comments »

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  1. Poll of a party that does not exist. No one knows if the hypothetical leaders of this party would ever agree to be in the same party. They usually all want to be No. 1 and so it never gets off the ground.

    If the Messiah comes tomorrow will he form a new party? Will it it win the election? Need a poll please!