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Home News Middle East Palestinian Authority & Gaza Strip

Poll finds dramatic rise in Palestinian support for Hamas

Survey by a Ramallah-based think tank finds 77% of Palestinians believe Hamas won the latest battle against Israel, and shows plummeting support for PA President Mahmoud Abbas.

by  AP and ILH Staff
Published on  06-16-2021 08:20
Last modified: 06-16-2021 08:20
'Western countries to see adversaries employ Hamas, Hezbollah tactics'Reuters/Mohammed Salem

Palestinian Hamas supporters attend an anti-Israel rally in the northern Gaza Strip, May 30, 2021 | Photo: Reuters/Mohammed Salem

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A new poll released Tuesday has found a dramatic surge in Palestinian support for Hamas following May's conflict with Israel, saying that around 75% of the Palestinians believe the Gaza-based terrorist group won the battle against Israel to defend Jerusalem and its holy sites.

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The poll, by the Ramallah-based Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research, also found plummeting support for President Mahmoud Abbas, who was sidelined by the war but is seen internationally as a partner for reviving the long-defunct peace process.

The poll found that 53% of Palestinians believe Hamas is "most deserving of representing and leading the Palestinian people," while only 14% prefer Abbas' secular Fatah party.

Head pollster Khalil Shikaki, who has been surveying Palestinian public opinion for more than two decades, called it a "dramatic" shift, but said it also resembles previous swings toward Hamas during times of confrontation. Those all dissipated within three to six months as Hamas failed to deliver on promises of change.

The march to war began in April, when Palestinian protesters clashed with Israeli police on a nightly basis in east Jerusalem over restrictions on public gatherings during the holy month of Ramadan. The clashes eventually spread to the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, a flashpoint holy site, and were also fueled by a real estate dispute in the Old City.

Israel seized east Jerusalem as well as the West Bank and Gaza, in 1967. The Palestinian became autonomous in large parts of the West Bank under the 1993 Oslo Accords, and Israel pulled out of Gaza in 2005, but the issue of Jerusalem remains a core obstacle in the peace talks, as the Palestinians refuse to recognize the city as the Israeli capital and demand their future state names east Jerusalem as its capital.

Moreover, Hamas – designated as a terrorist organization by Israel, the United States, Canada, the European Union, Japan, and Egypt – does not recognize the Jewish state's right to exist.

The poll found that 77% of Palestinians believe Hamas emerged as a winner, with nearly as many saying that it fought the war to defend Jerusalem and its holy sites, rather than as part of an internal struggle with Abbas' Fatah party.

The pollsters held face-to-face surveys with 1,200 Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza last week, with a 3 percentage point margin of error.

"Clearly, in the eyes of the public, Hamas came out as a winner," Shikaki said, adding that it may struggle to maintain those gains as it has little control over events in Jerusalem.

Abbas faces a major crisis of legitimacy among Palestinians after calling off the first elections in 15 years in April.

At the time, it appeared Fatah would suffer another humiliating defeat to Hamas, which won a landslide victory in 2006 parliamentary elections. But his decision, citing Israel's refusal to grant permission for voting in east Jerusalem, also helped clear the way for Hamas to draw attention to Abbas' weakness in the holy city.

Around two-thirds of Palestinians opposed his decision to call off the vote, the poll found. A similar number believe Abbas did so because he was worried about the results and not because Israel refused to explicitly allow voting in east Jerusalem, as he claimed.

Shikaki said Abbas could potentially regain support, but only if he shows initiative, either by reforming the PA, which is seen as increasingly corrupt and authoritarian, or by taking part in some kind of diplomatic push after a 12-year hiatus in the peace process.

"Unfortunately, so far, we are not seeing Abbas take the initiative," Shikaki said. "We don't see him talking to the public, he does not have a strategy, he does not have a plan. He is instead waiting. I don't think that alone is going to work unless Hamas really fails miserably.

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