Summary
A Pew Research Center survey (n=~3,500, March 23–29, 2026 — roughly one month into the Iran war) found 60% of American adults view Israel unfavorably, up from 53% a year prior and 42% in 2022. A 20-point swing in four years. Democrats: 80% unfavorable. Republicans: 58% still favorable. Under-50s across ideological lines: 70% unfavorable. Netanyahu approval: under 30%. 77% say the US-Iran conflict is personally important to them.
Key Points
- 60% unfavorable view of Israel among all US adults (up from 53% YoY; up from 42% in 2022 — a 20-point shift in 4 years).
- 37% favorable — the first time a majority of US adults has held an unfavorable view of Israel in Pew’s tracking history.
- 80% of Democrats unfavorable toward Israel.
- ~58% of Republicans still favorable; ~41% disapproval — Republican coalition is beginning to fracture.
- 70% of under-50s (across ideological spectrum) unfavorable toward Israel.
- Netanyahu: less than 30% of respondents confident he would “do the right thing regarding world affairs” (he holds an ICC arrest warrant for alleged war crimes).
- 77% of respondents say the US-Iran conflict is personally important to them — up sharply from Gaza-only context.
- Tucker Carlson and MTG explicitly cited as conservative figures pushing Trump to distance from Israel and end the war.
- Gallup (late February): Americans’ sympathies aligned more with Palestinians than Israelis for the first time; most 18-34-year-olds sympathized more with Palestinians.
- Surveyed March 23–29 — before the ceasefire announcement and its immediate fragmentation on April 8–9.
Newsletter Angles
- This is a structural political realignment in real time. 20 points in 4 years on Israel favorability is extraordinary movement. The Iran war appears to be accelerating it.
- The Republican split (58% favorable vs. 41% unfavorable) is the number to watch. Tucker Carlson and MTG represent a real isolationist wing that is now arguably the median Republican voter under 50. If that 41% grows, Netanyahu becomes a liability for Trump, not an asset.
- 77% say the Iran conflict is personally important — higher engagement than Gaza alone generated. This is a war that has broken through to American public consciousness in a way that prior Middle East conflicts often haven’t.
- The poll was taken before the ceasefire announcement and its immediate collapse. The current numbers are likely more unfavorable to both Israel and the war.
Entities Mentioned
- Israel — subject of poll; favorability collapsed from 58% to 37% favorable since 2022
- Donald Trump — 53%+ of respondents not confident in Trump’s Israel decisions
- Marjorie Taylor Greene — cited as conservative figure pushing against Israel support (now out of Congress)
- Iran — US-Iran war context for the poll; 77% say conflict personally important
Concepts Mentioned
- Coalition Fracture — Republican split on Israel (58% favorable vs. 41% unfavorable) is a live crack in Trump’s base
- Coercive Diplomacy — public opinion as a domestic constraint on Trump’s ability to sustain the war
Quotes
“About 70% of respondents younger than 50 had unfavorable opinions of Israel.” — Pew Research Center
“Among people who identified with the Democrats, 80% had unfavorable opinions of Israel.” — Pew Research Center
Notes
- Pew Research Center is a gold-standard polling organization. Sample size ~3,500; methodology solid.
- Timing is important: March 23–29 poll precedes the April 7–8 ceasefire announcement and its near-immediate collapse. Current numbers are likely more unfavorable.
- The Gallup finding (Americans sympathize more with Palestinians than Israelis for the first time in history) was from late February — also pre-ceasefire. Two separate high-credibility polls telling the same directional story.
- 2015 context: The Iran nuclear deal was struck; US-Israel relations were strained under Obama. Current unfavorability is happening under a president who is more pro-Israel institutionally than his predecessor.