Abbas Weighs Unilateral Statehood Declaration at UNGA
Palestinian Authority President Abbas considers declaring statehood at UN General Assembly, amid growing international support and Israeli opposition. Key diplomatic shift expected.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas is reportedly considering a unilateral declaration of Palestinian statehood during next month’s UN General Assembly in New York (UNGA), a symbolic but politically charged move aimed at reshaping the diplomatic landscape.
According to London-based outlet al-Araby al-Jadeed, the announcement would be paired with a “constitutional declaration” defining the borders, nature, and foundations of the envisioned state until a formal Palestinian constitution is ratified.
“The aim is to bolster the international push to recognize the State of Palestine,” Palestinian officials told the outlet.
The plan comes as Abbas prepares for elections to the Palestinian National Council by year’s end, the first in years, with 350 members, split between representatives in Judea and Samaria, Gaza, Jerusalem, and the diaspora. Candidates, according to WAFA, will be required to adhere to “the PLO’s political platform, its international obligations, and UN resolutions.”
Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir blasted the reported initiative, pledging to push for decisive action.
“This must be the response to the terrorist Abu Mazen [Abbas]’s fantasies of a ‘Palestinian state’ crushing the terror authority he heads,” Ben-Gvir wrote on X, adding he would ask Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to bring “immediate operative measures” to dismantle the PA.
The diplomatic backdrop is shifting. French President Emmanuel Macron announced in July that France will formally recognize a Palestinian state at the UNGA, calling it a fulfillment of France’s “historic commitment to a just and lasting peace in the Middle East.”
“The urgency today is to end the war in Gaza and to provide aid to the civilian population. Peace is possible,” Macron said.
Canada and the UK have also signaled openness to recognition, but only if the PA undergoes reforms and reaches a ceasefire with Hamas.
If Abbas follows through in September, the move may spark renewed tensions with Israel and test how far the growing international recognition can go in changing realities on the ground.