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foreign · 172 polls · 1 sources · updated Jun 21

US-Israel policy — public views

ally
65.4
−0.3 vs 7d
enemy
18.1
+0.4 vs 7d
Net
+47.3
series low
30-day Δ
−0.3
1-year Δ
−1.7
Series low
65.4
Series high
72.4
Last 90 days · ally
65.4
Within series envelope2017 → today
LOW 65.4 · Jun 22AVG 70.4HIGH 72.4 · Jan 30
What's moving
Verified

On the topic of US-Israel policy — public views, YouGov's June 22, 2026 poll found that 63% of Americans view Israel as a US ally, 21% as an enemy, and 16% are unsure [1]. That ally figure is essentially unchanged from roughly two months prior, when April 20 polling showed 64% ally and 20% enemy [1], and from March (also 64%) [1] — down 1 point on "ally" over the past ~60 days. The consistent range across recent months places the ally reading between 62% and 64%, with the enemy share holding near 20–21%.

ally over time

LOESS CONSENSUS
172 polls
BIAS-CORRECTED
House effects removed
INDIVIDUAL POLLS
raw readings
55%60%65%70%75%80%RAW 65.4CORR 63.020172019202120242026

Who's divided

ally by subgroup · latest crosstabs from YouGov (6/21/2026).

33pp
Party divides Americans most on this topic.
republican 80% ally · democrat 47% · widest spread of any dimension
Dimension
0% allyPOP AVG 63%100%
Spread
party
3 subgroups
democrat 47
independent 61
republican 80
33pp
gender
2 subgroups
male 72
female 55
17pp
age
4 subgroups
18-29 59
30-44 55
45-64 65
65+ 70
15pp
race
4 subgroups
white 67
black 54
hispanic 53
other 55
14pp
education
4 subgroups
hs or less 62
some college 63
college grad 64
postgrad 64
2pp

The party gap over time

Democrats and Republicans are 33 points apart today — 14pp wider than in 2017.

democrat47%independent61%republican80%ALLY % BY SUBGROUP
40%50%60%70%80%90%100%2019202120232025DEM 47IND 61REP 80