The Jerusalem Post

Poll: Biden dogged by Democrats’ ire over Israel

- • By JASON LANGE

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A majority of Democrats prefer a presidenti­al candidate who does not back US military aid for Israel, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll that showed Democratic President Joe Biden tied with Donald Trump ahead of the November presidenti­al election.

The three-day poll, which closed on Wednesday, showed 56% of respondent­s who identified themselves as Democrats said they were less likely to support a candidate who backs military assistance for Israel, compared to 40% who said they would be more likely to support such a candidate.

The poll results illustrate a potentiall­y critical vulnerabil­ity for Biden, who has angered some within his party by supporting Israel in its war against Hamas terrorists, ahead of a close November election in which Biden will be loath to lose support within his party.

Biden and his likely Republican opponent, former President Donald Trump, were tied with 36% support each in a hypothetic­al matchup, with the rest of poll respondent­s saying they were not sure or would vote for someone else or no one at all.

Biden’s early and vocal support of Israel and his refusal to condition military aid on a change in military tactics has sparked outrage in his party.

On Tuesday, more than 100,000 Michigan voters in the Democrats’ presidenti­al primary cast “uncommitte­d” ballots in a massive protest to Biden’s support for Israel’s military campaign.

Democrats’ anger has grown as the Gaza death toll climbs,

famine looms and much of the territory’s 2.3 million population has become homeless.

The war in Gaza started when Hamas militants attacked Israel on October 7, killing 1,200 people and capturing 253 hostages according to Israeli tallies, triggering a devastatin­g military response from Israel that has resulted in allegedly 30,000 deaths.

A growing minority of Democrats pin the blame for the conflict on Israel’s government, which the US has long pressured to grant some kind of statehood to a Palestinia­n territory. Twenty-two percent of Democrats in the poll blamed the Israeli government for the conflict, compared to 13% in the November poll. Democrats also overwhelmi­ngly said they wanted a presidenti­al candidate who would call for a ceasefire in the conflict.

Some 46% of Democrats in the Reuters/Ipsos poll said they blamed Hamas, down from 54% in a November poll.

While Biden has tried to balance

his support for Israel with calls for its military to do more to avoid civilian casualties, Trump has voiced full-throated support for the US ally, a position that appeared in line with the views of many Republican­s.

Some 62% of Republican­s in the poll said they preferred a presidenti­al candidate that favors supplying Israel with military aid, while 34% said that stance was a turnoff.

Relative to Biden, Trump has staked out a vastly different position on the America’s role in the NATO alliance, telling supporters in February that he once told the leader of a NATO ally that he would encourage Russia to attack the country if it were not meeting its financial obligation­s in the alliance.

In the new Reuters/Ipsos poll, 55% of Republican­s said they agreed with a statement that the United States must support democratic countries when they are attacked. Forty percent disagreed.

Among Democrats, 75% agreed and 23% disagreed.

 ?? (Tom Brenner/Reuters) ?? US PRESIDENT Joe Biden stands in a moment of contemplat­ion before speaking during a roundtable discussion on public safety from the State Dining Room at the White House, on Wednesday.
(Tom Brenner/Reuters) US PRESIDENT Joe Biden stands in a moment of contemplat­ion before speaking during a roundtable discussion on public safety from the State Dining Room at the White House, on Wednesday.

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