According to a poll released Thursday by Gallup, for the first time in its history of polling American attitudes toward Israelis and Palestinians, Democrats are more sympathetic to Palestinians than to Israelis. While a number of factors could explain the shift, the most likely reason should be obvious: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The right-wing Israeli leader has opted to burn his bridges with Democrats and openly root for the Republican Party in general and former President Donald Trump in particular. His partisan attitude, combined with the increasing violence Jewish settlers are perpetrating against Palestinians, helps explain why what was once solidly bipartisan support for Israel is becoming more fractured and nuanced.
Gallup’s new poll finds that, overall, “sympathy toward the Palestinians among U.S. adults is at a new high of 31%” and that Democrats’ “sympathies in the Middle East now lie more with the Palestinians than the Israelis, 49% versus 38%,” an 11-point shift since last year.
Support for the Palestinians ticked up among independents, as well, hitting a new high of 32%, though 49% “still lean towards the Israelis.” It’s worth noting that support for the Israelis among Republicans remains mostly unchanged. According to Gallup, 78% of GOP voters side with the Israelis, compared to just 11% who back the Palestinians.
Americans’ increased sympathy, according to Gallup, isn’t accompanied by a newfound love of the ruling Palestinian Authority. (The poll finds that Americans still “view Israel much more favorably than they do the Palestinian Authority, 68% versus 26%.”) Rather, partisan shifts and the decline in undecideds (only 15% of respondents now favor neither side) explain the narrowing of the gap in support for the Israelis and Palestinians over the last year.
Until recently, support for Israel was a largely bipartisan affair in Washington. A two-state solution and a goal of a peaceful resolution to the struggle between Israelis and Palestinians was something leaders of both parties used to say they were working toward. But Netanyahu laid down the groundwork for this current schism in 1996, during his first term as prime minister, when he clashed with President Bill Clinton, who later accused him of killing the peace process.
When Netanyahu returned to power in 2009 after a decade out of office, it became increasingly clear that he had decided to throw his lot in with the Republican Party. From an ideological standpoint, it made sense — Netanyahu leads the right-wing Likud Party, so it would only make sense that he would lean toward American conservatives, whom he saw as less likely to pressure him to make concessions to the Palestinians and more likely to take a hard-line stance toward Iran and Israel’s other Muslim adversaries.
That second premiership coincided with President Barack Obama’s first term, and he and Obama clashed repeatedly over the expansion of Jewish settlements in the West Bank and the international negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program. As Obama was running for re-election in 2012, Netanyahu even showed his support for GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney. In 2015, Netanyahu gave a joint address to the Republican-controlled Congress without even giving Obama’s White House a heads-up that he was visiting, a decision that was correctly interpreted as an intentional snub.
Though Trump’s commitment to Israel was first viewed as somewhat wobbly, he quickly disabused the public of the notion that he was going to be neutral in his dealings with the Israelis and the Palestinians. He moved the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem in 2018, and the next year he recognized Israeli sovereignty over the contested Golan Heights, which Israel had first captured in 1973. It was widely seen as a ploy from Trump to shore up support not from American Jews but from white evangelicals, whose interest in Israel can fairly be described as apocalyptic in nature, ahead of his re-election campaign.
There was an unspoken quid pro quo, in which in exchange for Trump’s endorsing Netanyahu’s re-election bid, the prime minister would return the favor. And so, in 2020, Netanyahu called Trump “the greatest friend that Israel has ever had in the White House.” The Israeli decision to block two Muslim leaders, Reps. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., who is Palestinian American, and Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., who was born in Somalia, from traveling to Israel for an official visit in 2019 was also a move clearly intended as a thank-you from Netanyahu to Trump, who has targeted the lawmakers with vitriol.








