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Could voters decide whether Switzerland recognises Palestine?

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
October 12, 2025
in Switzerland
Reading Time: 10 mins read
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Could voters decide whether Switzerland recognises Palestine?
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A solidarity rally for Gaza in front of the Federal Palace in Bern in June 2025.

A solidarity rally for Gaza in front of the Federal Palace in Bern in June 2025.


Keystone / Peter Klaunzer





Generated with artificial intelligence.

A committee wants to force the Swiss government to recognise Palestine as a state – by referendum. Is that possible?


This content was published on


October 10, 2025 – 10:00

What’s it all about?

A committee is planning a popular initiative for Switzerland to recognise the state of Palestine. According to research by Swiss public broadcaster, RTS, the Federal Chancellery has declared the initiative valid. The collection of signatures can therefore begin soon.

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A Palestinian flag flutters amid the ruins of buildings in Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip on March 4, 2025, amid the ongoing truce between Israel and Hamas.

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Swiss diplomacy

Why Switzerland doesn’t recognise Palestine as a state 




This content was published on


Sep 24, 2025



Around 150 countries – or three-quarters of UN member states – recognise Palestinian statehood. Switzerland, for various reasons, is not one of them.



Read more: Why Switzerland doesn’t recognise Palestine as a state 


What does the popular initiative demand?

Switzerland should recognise Palestine as a sovereign and independent state. The government is being put under pressure to do so.

Specifically, the Federal Constitution should also state: “Within three months of the adoption of the initiative by the people and the cantons, the Federal Council shall submit a declaration recognising the State of Palestine to the Secretary-General of the UN and the General Assembly of the United Nations.”

Who is behind this?

A 26-member committee made up of people from civil society, lawyers and several elected politicians from the left, including parliamentarian Raphaël Mahaim from the Green Party. It will soon be decided whether the Social Democratic Party and the Greens will officially support the issue.

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vote

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Swiss democracy

How Swiss direct democracy works




This content was published on


Mar 31, 2025



What do direct democratic tools like popular initiatives and referendums really entail? And how has this unique system evolved over time? 



Read more: How Swiss direct democracy works


Why a popular initiative?

More and more countries are recognising Palestine as a state. However, the issue is controversial in the Swiss parliament. The government believes it is too early to recognise Palestine as a state.

“The Federal Council isn’t doing its job to push through the two-state solution,” says co-initiator Raphaël Mahaim. This is why the committee is resorting to the instrument of a popular initiative.

Can the government be forced by the constitution?

“Yes, it can,” says Markus Schefer, professor of constitutional law at the University of Basel. “As long as the required behaviour does not violate mandatory international law or is impossible.”

Introducing slavery or abolishing the moon – that can’t be demanded of the government, he says, but recognising a state of Palestine can. “Whether that makes sense is another matter, of course,” Schefer says.

What are the chances?

“The issue strikes a nerve,” says political scientist Michael Hermann. A large majority of the population doesn’t agree with the Swiss government’s reticence towards Israel in the Middle East conflict, he says.

“Nevertheless, I rate the chances of the planned popular initiative as low.” Hermann believes that many people are likely to shy away from writing such a clear instruction to the government in the constitution.

What’s the biggest stumbling block?

A lot of time passes before a popular initiative comes before the people – usually two to three years. But it can draw public attention to the issue.

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Newsletter foreign affaires

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Inside SWI

Our weekly newsletter on foreign affairs



Switzerland in a fast-moving world. Join us to follow the latest Swiss foreign policy developments. We offer the perfect immersive package.



Read more: Our weekly newsletter on foreign affairs


Adapted from German by DeepL/ts

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