The annual Gallup poll finds that support among Americans for Israelis is almost as high as it’s ever been.
A BBC poll finds different numbers around the world.
The latest Gallup poll, carried out by phone in early February on 1,015 randomly-selected adults living in the continental U.S., finds that Americans are nearly four times as likely to side with Israel as with the Palestinian Authority. While 17% said they sympathize more with the Palestinians, some 63% said their sympathies lie more with the Israelis. Only in 1991 was there more support for Israel: 64%.
Gallup carries out surveys of this nature every year. The first poll, in 1988, found a 37-15 margin in favor of Israel. In ’91, during the Persian Gulf War, this shifted to a lopsided 64-7, when sympathy with the Arab cause was the lowest ever. In ’94, it was 43-15, then 54-8 in 1998, and 52-18 in 2005. By 2009, Israel had gained again, “leading” by a 59-18 margin, and it is now 63-17.
In addition, separate poll questions in the survey found that about two-thirds of Americans have a favorable opinion of Israel and 19% have a favorable opinion of the Palestinian Authority -- largely unchanged from February 2010.
Republicans continue to be Israel's strongest U.S. supporters: 80% sympathize more with the Israelis in the conflict, substantially higher than the 57% of independents and Democrats who incline toward Israel.
All major U.S.population subgroups show greater sympathy for the Israelis than for the Palestinians. However, on a relative basis, the PA's greatest support is found among liberals (30%), followed by Democrats and those with postgraduate education (24% each). Liberals are the least supportive of Israel among the groups measured by Gallup.
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