A landmark NBC News survey reveals a dramatic reversal in American public opinion toward Israel, with registered voters now expressing significantly more negative than positive views. The poll, released Monday, shows 39% of US voters hold unfavorable perceptions of Israel compared to 32% with positive attitudes—marking a substantial decline from 2023 when 47% viewed Israel favorably against just 24% negatively.
The most striking transformation has occurred among independent voters, a crucial demographic that contributed to President Donald Trump’s 2024 electoral victory. Their support for Israel has collapsed from 40% favorable and 22% unfavorable in 2023 to merely 21% favorable versus 48% unfavorable in 2026—more than doubling negative perceptions.
This seismic shift follows Israel’s military response to Hamas’ October 2023 attack that killed approximately 1,200 Israelis. Israel’s subsequent offensive in Gaza has resulted in over 72,000 Palestinian casualties, with the United Nations, human rights experts, and numerous world leaders concluding that Israel has committed acts of genocide. The Gaza conflict expanded into broader regional hostilities involving Israeli strikes against Lebanon, Syria, and Qatar, eventually escalating into a devastating joint US-Israel war with Iran.
Concurrently, sympathy for Palestinians has reached unprecedented levels. The poll indicates 40% of Americans now sympathize with Palestinians compared to 39% siding with Israel—a remarkable transformation from November 2013 when only 13% supported Palestinians.
Partisan divisions reveal astonishing realignments: 67% of registered Democrats currently support Palestinians, versus just 17% backing Israel—a complete reversal from 2013 when only 18% favored Palestinians. While Republican support remains strong at 69%, significant generational fractures are emerging. A complementary Pew Research study from April 2025 shows 50% of Republicans under 50 now view Israel unfavorably.
The most pronounced anti-Israel sentiment appears among young voters (18-34), with 63% holding negative views and only 13% maintaining positive perceptions—a dramatic drop from 2023 when 37% were negative, 26% positive, and 37% neutral. All age demographics show declining favorability, with the most severe drop occurring among 50-64-year-olds, where positive ratings plummeted from 58% to 37% while negative views doubled from 15% to 30%.
