According to Reuters, failure to pass the budget by March 31 would automatically trigger elections within 90 days. The same report said pollsters broadly see about 40% of voters sticking with Netanyahu’s coalition and a similar share with the opposition, leaving swing voters unconvinced and turning a fiscal deadline into a direct test of coalition survival.
Why the Netanyahu budget vote matters more than the battlefield
The political logic has grown harder for Netanyahu, not easier. An Associated Press analysis found that recent polls show broad support for the war even as Netanyahu and his bloc fail to gain from it, reducing any clear incentive to gamble on an early election.
The seat math is equally unforgiving. A Times of Israel poll published March 19 put Likud at 28 seats but Netanyahu’s coalition at only 51, well short of a majority in the 120-seat Knesset. That leaves the budget less as a routine governing vote than as a survival vote.
The government has been living on borrowed time since the Knesset gave the 2026 budget initial approval in a 62-55 vote in January. That bought Netanyahu breathing room, but not certainty, because the final vote is the one that decides whether the coalition can still function under wartime pressure.
Netanyahu budget vote and the cost of war
The financial backdrop has become harsher since the Iran campaign intensified. Reuters reported earlier this month that Israel’s revised 2026 budget added 32 billion shekels to defense spending, lifted the deficit target to 5.1% of GDP from 3.9%, and pushed total spending to 699 billion shekels excluding debt servicing.
That tighter fiscal picture leaves Netanyahu with less room to satisfy coalition partners while also paying for a longer war. In practical terms, he must hold together the same bloc that is still divided over military-service exemptions for ultra-Orthodox men, coalition funding and the broader question of who should bear the burden of a prolonged conflict.
Older fault lines are now closing in
This crisis did not appear overnight. Last year’s budget fight also came down to a late-March deadline, underscoring how Israeli budget votes have increasingly become confidence motions in all but name.
The draft-exemption dispute is older still. A Reuters report from June 2024 detailed how Israel’s Supreme Court ordered the state to begin drafting ultra-Orthodox seminary students, deepening strains inside Netanyahu’s coalition and turning a long-running social issue into a direct threat to government stability.
What comes after the vote
If Netanyahu passes the budget, he likely wins time, not momentum. He would still face a public that appears to support the war more than it supports his government, and a coalition whose internal contradictions have only become more expensive.
If he fails, the budget mechanism would do what the opposition has not: force Israel toward elections. After weeks of war with Iran and no clear polling bounce, that is the outcome Netanyahu now appears most eager to avoid.
