by Israel Hayom Staff
Israel Hayom poll: A majority believe peace process should not entail the release of deadly terrorists and the return to the 1967 borders, but two-state solution still popular • 73.1% say new talks will not produce an agreement that resolves conflict.
Blood on their hands.
Palestinian terrorists released in previous deals.
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Photo credit: Reuters |
The vast majority of Israeli Jews are against
the release of Palestinian terrorists "with blood on their hands" as a
means of restarting peace talks with the Palestinians, a poll
commissioned by Israel Hayom has found.
Almost 85 percent of Israeli Jews are against
the release of terrorists who have committed deadly attacks as a means
of facilitating the upcoming peace talks, the poll shows (9.4% said they
would support such a move and 5.7% had no opinion). A smaller
proportion (78.1%) said such Palestinian terrorists should not be
released even after the talks resumed and even if such a move was
contingent on progress in the peace process (13.7% support this, with
8.2% having no opinion).
The poll was conducted by New Wave Research on
Wednesday. Five hundred adult respondents comprising a random and
representative sample of Israel's Hebrew-speaking Jewish population were
polled. The statistical margin of error is +/-4.4%.
In addition, 61.6% said that should an
agreement with the Palestinians be reached, a national referendum must
be held on its merits (29.9% were either against a plebiscite or said a
cabinet decision would suffice and 8.5% had no opinion). A majority of
respondents (54.5%) said they would vote against a deal in which Israel
makes territorial concessions and essentially withdraws to the 1967
borders (26.7% said they would support such a deal and 18.8% had no
opinion).
According to the poll, 52.7% are "in principle" for a two-state solution, while 36.8% are opposed (10.5% had no opinion).
Almost two thirds (62.7%) were in favor of
resuming the peace talks (28.1% were opposed and 9.2% had no opinion),
although an overwhelming majority -- 73.1% -- said negotiations would
not lead to a permanent accord that would resolve the conflict (only
5.3% said the talks would conclude with a peace deal, while 21.6% had no
opinion).
As for the likelihood of an agreement passing a
referendum, 55.1% of those polled said such a prospect was unlikely
(24.8% said the referendum would pass and 20.1% had no opinion).
Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=10959
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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