Categories: Op-Eds
Where Israel Support is Fraying
The other major takeaway from the Pew survey is the ongoing deterioration of pro-Israel sentiment among young Americans. While feelings about Israel among all voters has remained fairly consistent in recent years (55% positive vs 41% negative), the generation gap that has emerged on this question is alarming. 18- to 29-year-olds hold almost the exact opposite attitudes as the overall electorate, with only 41% feeling favorably toward Israel and 56 feeling unfavorably. Contrast the leanings of older voters (ages 65 and over), whose support for Israel is 69% versus only 27% against.
Voters under 30 also maintain somewhat more positive feelings toward the Palestinian people than toward Israelis (61%-56%), in marked contrast to their parents and grandparents, whose feelings toward Israelis are much more positive. Younger Americans have equally low regard for the Palestinian and Israeli governments (35%-34%), while older voters give much higher marks to the Israeli government. (Pro-Israel advocates should recognize the political benefit of differentiating between the Palestinian people and their leaders.) But demography is destiny. As millennials and Gen Z-ers move into leadership positions in politics, business and society, their anti-Israel sentiments will steadily gain influence on the campaign trail and in government. Democrats maintain huge advantages with these younger voters, and so it's not difficult to see a future in which a younger and more progressive Democratic Party continues to become more skeptical – if not downright confrontational – toward Israel. At the same time, older and more religious Republicans will become more adamant in their Zionism – while simultaneously driving away most Jewish voters on social and cultural matters.The combination of these partisan and demographic trends paints a bleak picture for the future of American Zionism. Next week we'll talk about how to reverse them while we still can.


June 26, 2026 






