Surveys conducted over the current weekend indicate a decline in the popularity of the ruling Likud party, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. This regression is due to the advancement of the "Judicial Reform" plan aimed at weakening the judicial system and the Knesset's initial approval of the cancellation of the unreasonableness doctrine.
Based on the surveys published by the Israeli newspaper "Maariv," if Knesset elections were held now, Likud would receive 28 seats, one seat less than the newspaper's survey conducted the previous week. Yet, it would remain the largest party.
The gap between Likud and the "National Camp," led by Benny Gantz, narrows to two seats, as it would receive 26 seats. The survey results indicate that the current opposition parties would collectively secure 66 seats compared to the coalition parties' 54 seats."