User:Kahlores/Sandbox/Israel, 2019 - left-right with split tables

In the run-up to the 2019 Israeli legislative election, to be held on 9 April, various organisations have been carrying out opinion polling to gauge voting intention in Israel. Results of such polls are displayed in this article, ranging from the previous legislative election, held on 17 March 2015, to the present day.

Parties
Poll results are listed in the table below in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first. The highest figure in each survey is displayed in bold, and the background shaded in the leading party's colour. In the instance that there is a tie, then no figure is shaded.

Polls do not take the electoral threshold (currently 3.25%) into account in a uniform fashion. Some polls report the number of seats each party would win purely according to the percentages, as though there were no threshold; others eliminate parties that poll below the threshold and distribute the 120 available Knesset seats only among those who pass it. As a result, parties that poll at or near the threshold can show inconsistent results, bouncing between 0 and the minimum 3 or 4 seats. Polls may not add up to 120 seats due to rounding or omitted parties that drop out or do not poll consistently.

Campaign period
This table lists the polls published from the time that Yisrael Beiteinu left the coalition government in mid-November 2018, until five days before election day (4 April).


 * Legend
 * C — sum of government parties, including: Likud, Kulanu, Jewish Home, Shas, United Torah Judaism, but not Yisrael Beiteinu (left in November 2018). During the pre-campaign, Jewish Home splintered into New Right and URWP.

20th Knesset

 * Legend:
 * C — sum of government parties, including: Likud, Kulanu, The Jewish Home, Shas, United Torah Judaism and Yisrael Beiteinu (June 2016 – November 2018).
 * O — sum of opposition parties, including: Zionist Union (Labor Party and Hatnuah), Yesh Atid, Joint List and Meretz.

Mergers
Multiple polls were published about hypothetical mergers, some of which eventually materialized during the pre-campaign, such as Gantz, Ya'alon, Ashkenazi and Lapid (Blue and White), or Jewish Home, Tkuma and Otzma Yehudit (Union of Right-Wing Parties).


 * Likud and Yisrael Beiteinu


 * Hosen with Telem (Moshe Ya'alon)


 * Hosen with Hatnuah (Tzipi Livni)


 * Hosen with Yesh Atid (Yair Lapid)


 * Hosen with the Zionist Union


 * Hosen with Yesh Atid and Labor


 * Hosen with Yesh Atid and Gabi Ashkenazi


 * Hosen with Yesh Atid, Labor, Telem, Hatnua, Ashkenazi, Barak


 * Hosen with Kulanu and Gabi Ashkenazi


 * Union of right-wing parties


 * Haredim


 * Yesh Atid and Hatnuah


 * Labor and Meretz


 * Multiple mergers: Labor and Meretz, Hosen with Yesh Atid and Gabi Ashkenazi, Jewish Home and Tkuma

Preferred Prime Minister polling
Some opinion pollsters have asked voters which party leader they would prefer as Prime Minister.