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Friday Jun 5 2026 00:00
5 min
Recent opinion polls, as reported by Reuters, paint a worrying picture for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: a steep decline in his popularity in the northern regions, the front line bearing the brunt of continuous rocket fire from Hezbollah. With general elections on the horizon, Netanyahu faces escalating pressure from voters to adopt a more robust military strategy. Even the finalization of a ceasefire agreement late Wednesday evening appears unlikely to assuade the demands of the concerned northern populace.
A special poll conducted by the Hebrew University's Agam Laboratory in May, and released by Reuters, indicates that voters in the northern areas are abandoning the ruling Likud party at a significantly faster pace than in other parts of Israel. This trend reflects a more stringent assessment by northern residents of the government's handling of the conflict in Lebanon.
Netanyahu finds himself in a delicate political quandary. A regional player, Iran, has proposed a condition for brokering an agreement with the United States: Israel must cease its military operations in Lebanon. This situation places the Israeli Prime Minister between the demands of his domestic electorate, driven by upcoming elections, and the diplomatic considerations with his key ally, the US, creating a challenging decision-making environment.
With Israeli elections scheduled for October at the latest, the outcome could potentially unseat Netanyahu's governing coalition and disrupt his long-standing political tenure. The current administration is widely seen as the most right-wing government in Israel's history. However, a substantial segment of northern voters is advocating for a robust offensive against Hezbollah, free from US constraints.
In the border city of Kiryat Shmona, where nearly half of the electorate voted for the Likud in the previous election, the elimination of the constant threat posed by Hezbollah's rockets and drones has become the paramount concern for residents. When air raid sirens blare, citizens have mere seconds to seek shelter. Interviewed residents have explicitly stated that the Israeli military must sustain operations until Hezbollah's armed capabilities are dismantled.
Following the Hamas attack on October 7, 2023, Hezbollah initiated cross-border rocket fire, prompting Israel to launch a large-scale operation in Lebanon, targeting and eliminating several senior Hezbollah commanders and leading to a temporary cessation of hostilities. On February 28, subsequent to a joint US-Israeli action against Iran, Hezbollah resumed its shelling, and Israel redeployed forces, occupying significant swathes of southern Lebanon. According to the Institute for National Security Studies at Tel Aviv University, over 50 Israeli civilians have been killed by Hezbollah artillery fire since October 2023. Lebanese official figures, which do not differentiate between civilian and combatant casualties, report over 7,500 fatalities in the same period.
Many northern voters desire a more aggressive Israeli military response, believing that the pace should not slow even during brief lulls. The prevailing sentiment is that Netanyahu was pressured by then-US President Donald Trump into hastily agreeing to a ceasefire. One resident candidly stated, "I don't shy away from admitting I once voted for this government, but now it appears the one controlling national policy is the US President."
Hours after Israeli airstrikes on the southern Beirut suburbs, Trump announced on Monday that both Israel and Lebanon had agreed to de-escalate the conflict, as part of his broader efforts to secure a US-Iran deal. With elections imminent, Netanyahu's political rivals immediately accused him of trading national security for a ceasefire, further intensifying his governance crisis.
On Monday, prime ministerial candidate and former IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eizenkot publicly stated that areas occupied by Hezbollah should be precisely targeted, and the hands of the Israeli military should not be tied.
A new ceasefire agreement was reached late Wednesday evening, stipulating that Hezbollah withdraw from southern Lebanon. Netanyahu subsequently stated that Israeli military operations would continue as planned in the short term.
The Agam Laboratory poll revealed that the Likud's projected vote share in northern constituencies for the upcoming election has dwindled to just 23%, a sharp decline from the 35% it secured in the 2022 general election. The support for the broader right-wing governing coalition, upon which Netanyahu relies, has seen an even deeper fall in the region.
The north is home to one-fifth of Israel's electorate. The magnitude of vote loss for the Likud in this area is triple the national average, with nearly 70% of surveyed northern residents expressing dissatisfaction with the government's handling of the war in Lebanon.
Nimrod Nir, a researcher at Agam Laboratory, commented on the "subversive reversal" of public opinion in the area, noting that two-thirds of voters plan to cast their ballots for the anti-Netanyahu bloc, a stark contrast to previous electoral trends.
Kiryat Shmona declined to comment on the decline in vote share. This picturesque border town, which once thrived on agriculture and tourism, now sees shops shuttered, amusement areas deserted, and a large portion of its population displaced, rendering it a ghost town.
Major opposition parties are targeting northern votes with hawkish campaign platforms. Eizenkot has visited the area over 15 times in recent weeks, while Netanyahu has never set foot there.
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