An opinion poll by the Israeli newspaper Maariv showed that the elections for the Knesset, which is the 25th in Israeli history, scheduled for next November, will lead to a continuation of the indecisive state between right and left. in the political arena, and none of them will receive the required quorum of seats. Parliament forms the government, which is 61 seats out of 120.
The results show former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s bloc won 59 seats, compared to 56 for current Prime Minister Yair Lapid’s bloc, while 5 seats remain in the hands of the Joint Arab List.
The results of the poll showed that the Likud party, led by opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu, will receive 33 seats, while the Yesh Atid party, led by Yair Lapid, will receive 24 seats.
The Religious Zionism party, after merging with Azma Yehuda, won 13 seats, the same number as received by the “official camp” led by Defense Minister Benny Gantz.
As for Shas, it won 8 seats compared to 6 for the Joint Arab List and 6 for Torah Judaism.
Yisrael Beytenu, led by Finance Minister Avigdor Lieberman, won 5 seats, placing it on a par with the left-wing parties Meretz and the Labor Party.
The joint Arab list received only 4 seats, while the Zionist Spirit and the Economic Party failed to gain enough votes to enter the Knesset.
Source: El Nashra