Erosion concentrated among Democrats and independents
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam’s job approval has
dropped 14 points to 47 percent, with support from Democrats and independents
sharply down for the Republican governor since last spring, according to the
latest MTSU Poll.
Meanwhile,
approval ratings for Republican U.S. Sens. Lamar Alexander and Bob Corker have
also declined by double-digits — Alexander’s at 43 percent (down 11 points,
although he outpolls chief GOP primary rival Joe Carr); and Corker’s at 44
percent (down 14 points).
Approval
of the Republican-controlled Tennessee General Assembly also edged downward,
from 48 percent last spring to 44 percent now. The poll’s margin of error is
plus or minus 4 percentage points.
The
drop in Haslam’s approval rating from 61 percent last spring occurred primarily
among the state’s Democrats and political independents, according to Ken Blake,
director of the poll at Middle Tennessee State University.
“Among
the governor’s fellow Republicans, approval came in at 68 percent,
statistically the same as the 67 percent approval among Republicans last
spring.” Blake said. “But approval among Democrats fell from 52 percent to 42
percent, and approval among independents dropped from 69 percent to 41
percent.”
The
table below shows overall approval and approval broken down by party
identification.
“Do you approve
or disapprove of the way Bill Haslam is handling his job as governor?”
|
||||
Spring 2014
|
||||
|
Dem
|
Rep
|
Indep
|
All
|
Approve
|
42%
|
68%
|
41%
|
47%
|
Disapprove
|
38%
|
4%
|
26%
|
22%
|
Don't know
|
20%
|
26%
|
32%
|
30%
|
Refused
|
0%
|
2%
|
1%
|
2%
|
N
|
125
|
167
|
218
|
600
|
Spring 2013
|
||||
|
Dem
|
Rep
|
Indep
|
All
|
Approve
|
52%
|
67%
|
69%
|
61%
|
Disapprove
|
25%
|
11%
|
11%
|
15%
|
Don't know
|
20%
|
20%
|
18%
|
21%
|
Refused
|
3%
|
2%
|
2%
|
3%
|
N
|
159
|
181
|
194
|
650
|
Blake
noted that the drop in approval of the governor’s job performance played out
differently among Democrats than it did among independents.
“Among
Democrats, the drop in approval was due almost entirely to a rise in the percentage
who disapprove,” Blake said. “Among independents, by contrast, the drop
resulted from roughly equal rises in the percentages of those who disapprove
and those who feel undecided.”
Blake
said that further exploring the reasons behind these shifts would require a
poll focused on interviewing Democrats and independents.
“But
one possibility is that Democrats, having been briefly impressed with some of
the governor’s moderate positions during the last legislative session, are
asking what he has done for them lately. Meanwhile, some independents share
that view, while other independents just haven’t been paying much attention to
the governor recently.”
The
governor’s latest approval numbers, collected prior to his Feb. 3 State of the
State address, resemble those observed in the Spring 2011 and Fall 2011 MTSU Polls,
shortly after he took office.
In
Spring 2011, 43 percent of Tennesseans approved of Haslam’s performance, and 17
percent disapproved. In Fall 2011, it was 51 percent approval, 16 percent
disapproval.
The
governor’s highest approval rating to date, 68 percent, appeared in the Fall
2012 MTSU Poll, but that poll, taken in an election year, sampled registered,
likely voters rather than Tennessee adults in general.
Tennessee’s
previous governor, Democrat Phil Bredesen, peaked at 72 percent approval in the
Spring 2004 MTSU Poll but finished his administration with a 57 percent
approval rating in the Fall 2010 MTSU Poll.
Statewide,
21 percent of Tennessee adults identify themselves as Democrats, 28 percent as
Republicans, and 36 percent as independents. Another 8 percent say they are
“something else,” and the rest don’t know or decline to answer.
Meanwhile,
the slippage in approval of senators Alexander and Corker occurred primarily
among self-described political independents. Alexander’s approval among
independents dropped 22 points to 36 percent approval. Corker’s approval among
independents fell 24 points to 39 percent.
The
table below gives full breakdowns by party affiliation for the latest poll and
the Spring 2013 poll.
“Do you approve
or disapprove of the way Bob Corker is handling his job as a U.S. Senator?”
|
“Do you approve
or disapprove of the way Lamar Alexander is handling his job as a U.S.
Senator?”
|
|||||||||
Spring 2014
|
Spring 2014
|
|||||||||
|
Dem
|
Rep
|
Indep
|
All
|
|
Dem
|
Rep
|
Indep
|
All
|
|
Approve
|
40%
|
61%
|
39%
|
44%
|
Approve
|
42%
|
59%
|
36%
|
43%
|
|
Disapprove
|
43%
|
15%
|
28%
|
27%
|
Disapprove
|
38%
|
23%
|
37%
|
32%
|
|
Don't know
|
17%
|
24%
|
32%
|
27%
|
Don't know
|
18%
|
18%
|
26%
|
23%
|
|
Refused
|
0%
|
1%
|
1%
|
2%
|
Refused
|
2%
|
0%
|
1%
|
2%
|
|
N
|
125
|
167
|
218
|
600
|
N
|
125
|
167
|
218
|
600
|
|
Spring 2013
|
Spring 2013
|
|||||||||
|
Dem
|
Rep
|
Indep
|
All
|
|
Dem
|
Rep
|
Indep
|
All
|
|
Approve
|
48%
|
68%
|
63%
|
57%
|
Approve
|
48%
|
61%
|
58%
|
54%
|
|
Disapprove
|
29%
|
7%
|
20%
|
18%
|
Disapprove
|
26%
|
14%
|
21%
|
20%
|
|
Don't know
|
19%
|
22%
|
15%
|
21%
|
Don't know
|
25%
|
20%
|
19%
|
23%
|
|
Refused
|
4%
|
3%
|
3%
|
4%
|
Refused
|
1%
|
5%
|
3%
|
4%
|
|
N
|
159
|
181
|
194
|
650
|
N
|
159
|
181
|
194
|
650
|
Despite
his dropping approval numbers, Alexander appears to be holding up well so far
against state Rep. Joe Carr, his chief rival in the Republican primary.
Asked
who they would like to see win a Republican primary race between Alexander and
Carr, 29 percent favor Alexander, 14 percent would prefer “someone else,” and 8
percent would choose Carr. But a sizable 45 percent plurality of Tennesseans
say they remain undecided.
Among
Republicans in particular, 47 percent favor Alexander, 40 percent are
undecided, 7 percent favor Carr, 4 percent would like “someone else,” and the
rest decline to answer.
The
state Legislature saw a 4-point drop in approval to 44 percent in the current
poll.
As
with the governor’s approval rating, the largest decline appeared among
independents, 53 percent of whom approved in spring 2013 compared to 39 percent
in the current poll. Here, too, the 14-point decline among independents corresponded
to twin, 7-point increases in those disapproving of and feeling unsure about
the Legislature’s job performance.
Poll
data were collected Jan. 23–26, via telephone interviews of 600 Tennessee
adults conducted by Issues and Answers Network Inc. using balanced, random
samples of Tennessee landline and cell phones. Results have an error margin of
plus-or-minus 4 percentage points at the 95 percent level of confidence. The
data were weighted to match the latest available Census estimates of gender and
race proportions in Tennessee.
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