Less than two months before the third round of elections in Israel, the political situation remains unclear
A poll conducted for Radio 103FM by the Maagar Mochot Institute, headed by Prof. Yitzhak Katz, found that in either scenario - running in the existing party structure, unification on the left, or unification on the right - none of the blocs can form a government without assistance from a party on the other side, or of course, from Avigdor Liberman’s Yisrael Beytenu.
According to the poll, if elections were held today without any changes in the make-up of the parties, the right would achieve 54 seats while the center-left together with the Joint List would reach 59.
Should there be a full union on the right between Jewish Home, Otzma Yehudit, the National Union and the New Right - the right grows by only one seat to 55 seats, with 58 for the other bloc. A union on the left between Labor-Gesher and the Democratic Union would actually weaken the bloc to 57 seats, just one more seat than what the right would win. Read more at Arutz-7