Choose? Most Palestinians did not in fact support Hamas and haven't been given a chance to vote otherwise. I cannot tell if you don't know this or are being purposely disingenuous.
You are mistaken.
" according to a November 14
poll by the Arab World for Research and Development. When asked the leading question “How much do you support the military operation carried out by the Palestinian resistance led by Hamas on October 7?” Palestinian responses showed support for the attack.
Palestinians living in the West Bank overwhelmingly answered that they supported the attack to either an extreme or “somewhat” extent (83.1%.) Only 6.9% answered that they were “extremely” or “somewhat” against the attack, and 8.4% expressed that they had no opinion either way.
Palestinians living in the Gaza Strip show a little less consensus but the overall majority supported the attack. A mass of 63.6% said that they supported the attack “extremely” or to a “somewhat” extent. A further 14.4% answered that they did not oppose or support the attack. Showing a greater rift than that of the West Bank, 20.9% of Palestinians living in Gaza opposed the attack to some degree. "
A total of 75% of respondents agreed with the October 7 attack and 74.7% agreed that they support a single Palestinian state “from the river to the sea.”
www.jpost.com
Since 1920, the Palestinians have been united in wanting to drive the Jews out of Palestine or kill them. The Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, the most prominent Palestinian leader in the 1920's and 1930's organized riots in Jerusalem to drive the Jews out and the Palestinians ethnically cleansed all of Judea and Samaria of Jewish communities, some o which had been there since biblical times. Later, the Grand Mufti made a pact with Hitler to jointly kill all the Jews in Palestine. Today he is regarded as a hero by the Palestinians. The goal was clearly and unabashedly, genocide, and it still is.
In 1947, the Secretary General of the Arab League was explicit in threatening genocide against the Jews if they declared statehood when the UN withdrew from Palestine in May 14, 1948:
An October 11, 1947 report on the pan-Arab summit in the Lebanese town of Aley,
[9] by
Akhbar al-Yom's editor Mustafa Amin, contained an interview he held with Arab League secretary-general Azzam. Titled, "A War of Extermination," the interview read as follows (translated by Efraim Karsh; all ellipses are in the original text):
Abdul Rahman Azzam Pasha spoke to me about the horrific war that was in the offing… saying:
"I personally wish that the Jews do not drive us to this war, as this will be a war of extermination and momentous massacre which will be spoken of like the Tartar massacre
[10] or the Crusader wars. I believe that the number of volunteers from outside Palestine will be larger than Palestine's Arab population, for I know that volunteers will be arriving to us from [as far as] India, Afghanistan, and China to win the honor of martyrdom for the sake of Palestine … You might be surprised to learn that hundreds of Englishmen expressed their wish to volunteer in the Arab armies to fight the Jews.
Of the countless threats of violence, made by Arab and Palestinian leaders in the run up to and in the wake of the November 29, 1947 partition resolution, none has resonated more widely than the warning by Abdul Rahman Azzam, the Arab League's first
www.meforum.org
Today, Hamas is again explicit in threatening genocide and as the poll above shows, the overwhelming majority of Palestinians support them on that issue, showing that the destruction of Israel has always been the main goal of the so called Palestinians and making it clear that today, Hamas is the voice of the Palestinians. The two state solution is a European fairy tale that has never had much support among the Palestinians.