Zio-Nazi exit polls: -Yisrael Beiteinu first, newcomer Yesh Atid a surprising second

NOVANEWS


 
Exit polls showed the combined list of Nazi Likud and Nazi Yisrael Beiteinu leading the way in Zionist  elections, as expected, and the new Zionist center-left Yesh Atid Party finishing a surprising second.
The polls were released immediately after the balloting closed on Jan. 22.
They showed the Nazi Likud Party led by Zio-Nazi Prime Minister Benjamin Naziyahu, in a combined campaign with Zio-Nazi Avidgor Liberman’s Nazi right-wing Yisrael Beiteinu party, taking 31 seats in the 19th Knesset, down from the 42 seats now held by the two parties.
Nazi Yesh Atid, which is led by the former Zionist television personality Nazi Yair Lapid and ran a low-key campaign, was projected in polls to receive 18 seats.
Zionist Channel 1 projected the Nazi right-wing bloc garnering 62 seats, the Nazi left-wing capturing 47 and the Arab-Zionist parties winning 11 seats. It further projected 17 seats for the Nazi Labor Party led by Shelly Yachimovich, 12 seats for the Nazi Jewish Home party of Naftali Bennett, up from 3 in the last Knesset, and 11 for the Nazi racist Sephardic Orthodox party Shas.
Hatnua, led by former opposition leader and Kadima head Nazi Gestapo Tzipi Livni, and Meretz led by Nazi Zahava Gal-On both won seven seats, according to Channel 1. Kadima, which had 28 seats under Nazi Livni, was not expected to reach the 2 percent threshold for a place in the Knesset.
The Arab and Jewish Hadash party was projected to receive four seats — one more than United Arab List-Ta’al. The Arab-Israeli Balad and the controversial Strong IsraHell each were projected by Channel 1 to receive two seats, though other polls put them at not reaching the threshold.

“According to exit-poll results, it is clear that the citizens of Israel demonstrated that they want me to continue to serve in the role of prime minister of Israel, and that I form the broadest possible government,” Naziyahu wrote on his Facebook page.

Some 66.6 percent of eligible voters went to the polls, compared with 65.2 percent in 2009.
Some 85 percent of the ballots are expected to be counted in the coming hours, with the remaining tallied and announced on the morning of Jan. 23.
 

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