Marquette University
Press Release

New Marquette Law School Poll of Wisconsin voters finds Johnson and Evers holding slim leads as races for senator and governor tighten

Please note: Complete Poll results and methodology information can be found online at law.marquette.edu/poll

By - Sep 14th, 2022 01:14 pm

MILWAUKEE — A new Marquette Law School Poll survey of Wisconsin voters finds close races for governor and for the U.S. Senate.

Among likely voters, in his race for reelection, Sen. Ron Johnson, a Republican, is supported by 49%, while his Democratic opponent, Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes, is the choice of 48%. In August, immediately after the primary election, Johnson trailed Barnes by 7 percentage points, 52% to 45%, among likely voters. All vote results include undecided voters who lean to a candidate.

In the governor’s race, 47% of likely voters support Democratic Gov. Tony Evers, while 44% favor Republican Tim Michels. The independent candidate, Joan Beglinger, is chosen by 5%, with 3% who don’t know. Beglinger ended her campaign on Sept. 6 but will remain on the November ballot. In the Marquette Law School Poll’s August survey, Evers received 48%, Michels 44%, and Beglinger 4% among likely voters.

Table 1 shows the vote preference for governor, among likely voters in August and September and among registered voters since June. Beglinger was not included in the June survey. (All results in the tables are stated as percentages; the precise wording of the questions can be found in the online link noted above.)

Table 1: Vote for Wisconsin governor

(a) Likely voters

Poll dates Evers Michels Beglinger Other Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 47 44 5 0 3 0
8/10-15/22 48 44 4 0 2 1

(b) Registered voters

Poll dates Evers Michels Beglinger Other Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 44 43 8 1 4 0
8/10-15/22 45 43 7 0 3 2
6/14-20/22 48 41 NA 2 8 2

Table 2 shows the trend in support for the Senate candidates, among likely voters in August and September and among registered voters since June.

Table 2: Vote for U.S. Senate

(a) Likely voters

Poll dates Barnes Johnson Neither Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 48 49 1 1 0
8/10-15/22 52 45 0 1 1

(b) Registered voters

Poll dates Barnes Johnson Neither Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 47 48 3 3 0
8/10-15/22 51 44 1 3 1
6/14-20/22 46 44 1 7 2

The survey was conducted Sept. 6-11, 2022, interviewing 801 Wisconsin registered voters, with a margin of error of +/- 4.3 percentage points. The margin of error among likely voters is +/- 4.9 percentage points.

Partisan support for the candidates in the race for governor is shown in Table 3 among likely voters. Both Democratic and Republican voters are strongly unified behind their respective party’s candidates, with 95% of Democrats supporting Evers and 92% of Republicans supporting Michels. Forty-five percent of independents back Evers, while 39% prefer Michels. The independent candidate, Beglinger, receives 11% from independent voters, 2% from Republicans, and 2% from Democrats.

Table 3: Vote for governor among likely voters, by party identification

(a) September

Party ID Evers Michels Beglinger Other Don’t know Refused
Republican 3 92 2 0 3 1
Independent 45 39 11 0 5 0
Democrat 95 4 2 0 0 0

(b) August

Party ID Evers Michels Beglinger Other Don’t know Refused
Republican 5 92 2 0 1 0
Independent 49 38 7 0 4 2
Democrat 94 2 3 0 0 1

Partisan support for the U.S. Senate candidates is shown in Table 4, among likely voters. As in the governor’s race, partisans are well-aligned with their party’s candidates, with 96% of Democrats supporting Barnes and 97% of Republicans supporting Johnson. Forty-eight percent of independents back Johnson, while 46% prefer Barnes.

Table 4: Vote for U.S. Senate among likely voters, by party identification

(a) September

Party ID Barnes Johnson Neither Don’t know Refused
Republican 2 97 1 0 0
Independent 46 48 2 3 0
Democrat 96 4 0 0 0

(b) August

Party ID Barnes Johnson Neither Don’t know Refused
Republican 6 94 0 0 0
Independent 55 40 0 3 3
Democrat 99 0 0 0 0

Voters were asked about the chances they will vote in November—were they “absolutely certain to vote,” “very likely to vote,” were the “chances 50-50,” or “don’t you think you will vote.” Among Republicans, 77% said they are “absolutely certain” to vote in November’s elections, as did 80% of Democrats and 71% of independents. Certainty of voting by party is shown in Table 5.

Table 5: Likelihood of voting, by party identification

(a) September

Party ID Absolutely certain Very likely 50-50 Will not vote
Republican 77 16 3 3
Independent 71 13 12 3
Democrat 80 12 7 0

(b) August

Party ID Absolutely certain Very likely 50-50 Will not vote
Republican 83 11 4 2
Independent 66 16 14 3
Democrat 82 8 5 5

The effect of different levels of turnout on vote for governor is shown in Table 6 and for Senate in Table 7. The first row shows preference among all registered voters, with the second row showing the results for an electorate composed of those either “absolutely certain” to vote or “very likely” to vote, while the third row shows the results only among likely voters (i.e., those who say they are “absolutely certain” to vote).

Table 6: Vote for governor, by certainty of voting

How likely to vote Evers Michels Beglinger Other Don’t know
Among all registered voters 44 43 8 1 4
Those “absolutely certain” or “very likely” to vote 45 44 6 0 4
Only those “absolutely certain” to vote 47 44 5 0 3

Table 7: Vote for U.S. Senate, by certainty of voting

How likely to vote Barnes Johnson Neither Don’t know
All registered voters 47 48 3 3
Those “absolutely certain” or “very likely” to vote 47 49 1 2
Only those “absolutely certain” to vote 48 49 1 1

Perceived candidate traits

Table 8 shows the favorable and unfavorable ratings of the candidates since June, along with respondents who say they haven’t heard enough or don’t know. The non-incumbents have become substantially better known following their primary victories on Aug. 9, although they remain much less well-known than the incumbents. More than 90% of respondents lack an opinion of the independent candidate for governor, Joan Beglinger, who has ended her campaign but whose name will remain on the November ballot.

Table 8: Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of [name below] or haven’t you heard enough about them yet? (Among registered voters.)

(a) Evers

Poll dates Favorable Unfavorable Haven’t heard enough Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 45 45 7 3 0
8/10-15/22 46 41 6 6 0
6/14-20/22 44 42 11 2 0

(b) Michels

Poll dates Favorable Unfavorable Haven’t heard enough Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 34 39 19 8 1
8/10-15/22 33 33 24 10 0
6/14-20/22 22 22 51 5 0

(c) Beglinger

Poll dates Favorable Unfavorable Haven’t heard enough Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 3 6 63 28 0

(d) Barnes

Poll dates Favorable Unfavorable Haven’t heard enough Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 33 32 25 9 1
8/10-15/22 37 22 30 11 0
6/14-20/22 21 16 57 6 0

(e) Johnson

Poll dates Favorable Unfavorable Haven’t heard enough Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 39 47 11 3 1
8/10-15/22 38 47 9 6 0
6/14-20/22 37 46 14 2 0

Table 9 shows the perceptions of which candidates better understand the problems of ordinary people in Wisconsin.

Table 9: Who do you think better understands the problems faced by ordinary people in Wisconsin, …? (Among registered voters.)

(a) … Tony Evers or Tim Michels?

Poll dates Tony Evers Tim Michels Both Neither Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 47 41 0 4 7 0

(b) … Mandela Barnes or Ron Johnson?

Poll dates Mandela Barnes Ron Johnson Both Neither Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 44 40 1 6 9 0

Table 10 shows the perception that candidates “share my values.” The relative lack of familiarity with the non-incumbent candidates, Michels and Barnes, is evident in the higher percentages that say they “don’t know” about them than that say the same about two incumbents, Evers and Johnson.

Table 10: For each of the following candidates, would you say they are someone who shares your values, or don’t they share your values? (Among registered voters.)

Candidate Shares values Doesn’t share values Don’t know
Evers 47 48 5
Michels 41 47 11
Barnes 44 41 15
Johnson 42 51 7

Perceptions of incumbents’ performance

Table 11 shows the perceived effectiveness of Evers as governor and Johnson as a senator, among registered voters.

Table 11: How effective is [Tony Evers as governor of Wisconsin]/[Ron Johnson as a US Senator]? (Among registered voters.)

(a) Tony Evers

Poll dates Very effective Somewhat effective Not very effective Not at all effective Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 18 35 20 23 3 0

(b) Ron Johnson

Poll dates Very effective Somewhat effective Not very effective Not at all effective Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 20 30 12 30 7 0

Table 12 shows the views among registered voters of how Evers and Johnson responded to the coronavirus pandemic.

Table 12: Do you approve or disapprove of the way [Tony Evers]/[Ron Johnson] responded to the coronavirus pandemic? (Among registered voters.)

(a) Tony Evers

Poll dates Strongly approve Somewhat approve Somewhat disapprove Strongly disapprove Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 27 23 13 29 8 0

(b) Ron Johnson

Poll dates Strongly approve Somewhat approve Somewhat disapprove Strongly disapprove Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 17 17 9 37 18 1

Table 13 shows approval and disapproval among registered voters of how Evers responded to the protests and violence in Kenosha in August 2020.

Table 13: Do you approve or disapprove of the way Tony Evers responded to the protests and violence in Kenosha in August 2020? (Among registered voters.)

Poll dates Strongly approve Somewhat approve Somewhat disapprove Strongly disapprove Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 16 22 10 37 15 0

Evers job approval

Table 14 shows approval among registered voters, since February 2022, of how Evers has handled his job as governor. There has been a steady decline in net approval during this period. The new survey is only the second time more respondents have disapproved than approved of Evers’ handling of his job since taking office.

Table 14: Overall, do you approve or disapprove of the way Tony Evers is handling his job as Governor of Wisconsin? (Among registered voters.)

Poll dates Net approval Approve Disapprove Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 -3 44 47 8 0
8/10-15/22 2 47 45 8 1
6/14-20/22 3 48 45 6 1
4/19-24/22 6 49 43 7 1
2/22-27/22 9 50 41 8 1

Important issues

In each Marquette Law School Poll survey since August 2021, respondents have been asked how concerned they are with a variety of issues. Table 15 shows the concern with 10 issues in the current survey, sorted from highest to lowest percentage saying they are “very concerned.”

Table 15: How concerned are you about each of the following? Are you very concerned, somewhat concerned, not too concerned, or not at all concerned with …, (Among registered voters.)

Issue Very concerned Somewhat concerned Not too concerned Not at all concerned
Inflation 70 24 5 2
Crime 61 27 10 2
Accurate vote count 56 21 11 12
Public schools 56 33 7 2
Gun violence 55 26 11 6
Abortion policy 53 24 11 8
Taxes 51 32 10 6
Climate change 44 29 14 13
Illegal immigration 38 31 18 11
Coronavirus 22 29 23 25

Inflation ranks as the top issue concern. After declining as a concern from June to August, the percentage saying they are very concerned about inflation rose slightly in September.

Table 16: Concern about inflation, Aug. 2021-Sept. 2022 (Among registered voters.)

Poll dates Very concerned Somewhat concerned Not too concerned Not at all concerned
9/6-11/22 70 24 5 2
8/10-15/22 67 27 4 0
6/14-20/22 75 20 4 1
4/19-24/22 69 23 6 1
2/22-27/22 68 28 3 1
10/26-31/21 64 28 6 1
8/3-8/21 49 35 11 3

Partisans differ substantially in their concern over particular issues, as shown in Table 17. Panel (a) in the table is sorted by concern among Republicans, panel (b) is sorted by concern among Democrats, and panel (c) is sorted by concern among independents. The entries are the percentage of each partisan group who say they are “very concerned” about the issue.

Table 17: Issue concerns by party identification, percent “very concerned” (Among registered voters.)

(a) Sorted by concern among Republicans

Issue Republican Independent Democrat
Inflation 92 69 41
Accurate vote count 76 56 40
Taxes 74 48 26
Crime 71 61 47
Illegal immigration 69 32 19
Public schools 53 60 53
Gun violence 39 52 85
Abortion policy 34 54 77
Climate change 17 39 71
Coronavirus 9 23 33

(b) Sorted by concern among Democrats

Issue Republican Independent Democrat
Gun violence 39 52 85
Abortion policy 34 54 77
Climate change 17 39 71
Public schools 53 60 53
Crime 71 61 47
Inflation 92 69 41
Accurate vote count 76 56 40
Coronavirus 9 23 33
Taxes 74 48 26
Illegal immigration 69 32 19

(c) Sorted by concern among Independents

Issue Republican Independent Democrat
Inflation 92 69 41
Crime 71 61 47
Public schools 53 60 53
Accurate vote count 76 56 40
Abortion policy 34 54 77
Gun violence 39 52 85
Taxes 74 48 26
Climate change 17 39 71
Illegal immigration 69 32 19
Coronavirus 9 23 33

Abortion

The U.S. Supreme Court decision earlier this year to overturn Roe v Wade, the 1973 ruling which had meant that abortion was legal nationwide, is opposed by a majority of Wisconsin registered voters, including majorities of independents and Democrats. It is favored by a majority of Republicans in the state, as shown in Table 18.

Table 18: Do you favor or oppose the recent Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe versus Wade, thus striking down the 1973 decision that made abortion legal in all 50 states? (Total and by party identification among registered voters.)

(a) September

Party ID Favor Oppose Haven’t heard of decision Don’t Know Refused
Total 30 63 0 5 2
Republican 59 29 0 8 4
Independent 28 66 0 5 1
Democrat 3 95 0 2 0

(b) August

Party ID Favor Oppose Haven’t heard of decision Don’t Know Refused
Total 33 60 1 4 2
Republican 62 28 0 8 2
Independent 31 62 2 2 3
Democrat 5 92 0 2 1

The respondents overwhelmingly support allowing legal abortions in the case of rape or incest, with support of 70% or more in each partisan group, as shown in Table 19.

Table 19: Do you think Wisconsin should or should not allow a woman to obtain a legal abortion if she became pregnant as the result of rape or incest? (Total and by party identification among registered voters.)

(a) September

Party ID Should allow Should not allow Don’t Know Refused
Total 83 10 5 2
Republican 70 20 8 3
Independent 83 9 6 2
Democrat 96 2 2 0

 (b) August

Party ID Should allow Should not allow Don’t Know Refused
Total 88 8 4 1
Republican 79 16 4 2
Independent 87 6 5 2
Democrat 97 1 1 0

Other issues

The decision by President Biden to forgive certain student loans is approved by 46%, with 50% who disapprove. Table 20 shows the total and partisan views of this issue.

Table 20: Do you favor or oppose the decision to forgive and cancel up to $20,000 of federal student loan debt? (Among registered voters.)

Party ID Approve Disapprove Don’t know Refused
Total 46 50 3 1
Republican 11 85 3 0
Independent 46 50 4 0
Democrat 85 13 2 0

Approval of student loan forgiveness by education and age is shown in Table 21. Younger voters are more approving than older ones, and college graduates are slightly more approving than non-graduates of the same age.

Table 21: Do you favor or oppose the decision to forgive and cancel up to $20,000 of federal student loan debt? (By education and age, among registered voters.)

Education Age Approve Disapprove Don’t know Refused
Non-college grad 18-29 74 24 3 0
Non-college grad 30-44 49 47 4 0
Non-college grad 45-59 38 55 7 0
Non-college grad 60+ 34 63 2 2
College grad 18-29 76 24 0 0
College grad 30-44 51 46 4 0
College grad 45-59 42 54 3 0
College grad 60+ 45 51 4 0

While 61% say they are very concerned with crime, a large majority, 76%, say they feel safe going about their daily activities, while 23% say they worry about their safety. On this item there are only slight partisan differences, as shown in Table 22.

Table 22: Do you feel safe from crime when going about your daily activities or are you worried about your safety? (Total and by party identification among registered voters.)

Party ID Feel safe Worried Don’t know
Total 76 23 1
Republican 78 21 1
Independent 75 24 1
Democrat 76 23 1

In contrast to worries about personal safety, Republicans express considerably greater concern about crime as an issue, as shown in Table 23.

Table 23: How concerned are you about each of the following… Crime? (Total and by party identification among registered voters.)

Party ID Very concerned Somewhat concerned Not too concerned Not at all concerned Don’t know
Total 61 27 10 2 0
Republican 71 23 5 1 0
Independent 61 25 11 3 1
Democrat 47 35 15 3 0

Worry about personal safety is greater in the City of Milwaukee than in other areas of the state, as shown in Table 24, which combines data from October 2021, April 2022, and September 2022 in order to have larger sample sizes supporting regional comparisons.

Table 24: Do you feel safe from crime when going about your daily activities or are you worried about your safety? (By region among registered voters, Oct. 2021, April 2022, and Sept. 2022.)

Region Feel safe Worried Don’t know
City of Milwaukee 52 48 0
Rest of Milwaukee media market 74 24 2
Madison media market 82 17 1
Green Bay media market 87 12 1
Rest of north and west of state 85 15 0

While those in the Milwaukee area outside of the city are much less worried about personal safety than are residents of the city, they express equally high levels of concern about crime as do those in the city. Those in other regions of the state express lower levels of concern. Table 25 combines the August and September polls to increase sample size in each region.

Table 25: How concerned are you about each of the following… Crime? (By region among registered voters, Aug. and Sept. 2022.)

Region Very concerned Somewhat concerned Not too concerned Not at all concerned Don’t know
City of Milwaukee 74 19 7 0 0
Rest of Milwaukee media market 71 24 5 0 0
Madison media market 53 34 11 1 1
Green Bay media market 48 30 15 6 2
Rest of north and west of state 53 32 11 2 1

Opinion concerning the closure of schools and businesses at the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic in the spring of 2020 has shifted over time, as the initial very high support for closures has declined. In these new results, a majority, 56%, say the closures were an appropriate response, while 41% say they were an overreaction that did more harm than good. The trend since March 2020 is shown in Table 26.

Table 26: Do you think the decision in 2020 to close schools and businesses and to restrict the size of public gatherings was an appropriate response to the coronavirus outbreak or was it an overreaction that did more harm than good? (Among registered voters.)

Poll dates Appropriate response Overreaction Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 56 41 3 0
2/22-27/22 61 35 3 0
8/3-8/21 62 35 2 1
10/21-25/20 68 26 5 0
6/14-18/20 72 25 3 0
5/3-7/20 69 26 4 1
3/24-29/20 86 10 3 0

Forty-one percent of registered voters say it is more important to reduce property taxes, while 51% say it is more important to increase spending on public schools. When asked in August, 43% said reduce property taxes and 52% said increase spending on public schools. Table 27 shows the partisan divide on support for property tax cuts versus spending on schools in the September survey.

Table 27: Which is more important to you: reduce property taxes or increase spending on public schools? (Total and by party identification among registered voters.)

Party ID Reducing property taxes Increasing spending on public schools Don’t know Refused
Total 41 51 5 3
Republican 69 22 5 4
Independent 46 42 8 4
Democrat 12 85 3 0

A majority, 62%, say they are very satisfied or satisfied with the public schools in their community, while 31% are dissatisfied or very dissatisfied. Table 28 shows the total and partisan breakdowns in the September survey.

Table 28: How satisfied are you with the job the public schools are doing in your community? (Among registered voters.)

Party ID Very satisfied Satisfied Dissatisfied Very dissatisfied Don’t know
Total 19 43 20 11 7
Republican 13 38 22 17 10
Independent 17 45 19 12 6
Democrat 28 47 17 2 6

Direction of state, Biden approval, Baldwin favorability

A majority of respondents, 53%, think the state is off on the wrong track, while 40% say it is headed in the right direction. The trend since February is shown in Table 29.

Table 29: Thinking just about the state of Wisconsin, do you feel things in Wisconsin are generally going in the right direction, or do you feel things have gotten off on the wrong track? (Among registered voters.)

Poll dates Right direction Wrong track Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 40 53 7 1
8/10-15/22 35 56 9 0
6/14-20/22 37 56 6 0
4/19-24/22 36 56 7 0
2/22-27/22 39 53 8 1

In September, 40% approve of the way President Joe Biden is handling his job, while 55% disapprove, unchanged from August. The trend in Biden approval in 2022 is shown in Table 30.

Table 30: Overall, do you approve or disapprove of the way Joe Biden is handling his job as president? (Among registered voters.)

Poll dates Approve Disapprove Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 40 55 4 0
8/10-15/22 40 55 5 1
6/14-20/22 40 57 3 0
4/19-24/22 43 53 3 1
2/22-27/22 43 52 3 2

Sen. Tammy Baldwin is seen favorably by 37% and unfavorably by 40%. The trend in views of Baldwin is shown in Table 31.

Table 31: Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Tammy Baldwin or haven’t you heard enough about her yet? (Among registered voters.)

Poll dates Favorable Unfavorable Haven’t heard enough Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 37 40 19 4 1
8/10-15/22 39 37 18 6 0
6/14-20/22 39 37 20 3 1
4/19-24/22 43 36 17 3 0
2/22-27/22 42 36 18 3 1

 2020 election confidence and Trump favorability

Opinion on the accuracy of the results of the 2020 presidential election continues to sharply divide the public, with 65% saying they are very or somewhat confident and 34% saying they are not too confident or not at all confident in the election result. These views overall and by party identification are shown in Table 32.

Table 32: How confident are you that, here in Wisconsin, the votes for president were accurately cast and counted in the 2020 election? (Total and by party identification among registered voters.)

Party ID Very confident Somewhat confident Not too confident Not at all confident Don’t know Refused
Total 46 19 16 18 1 0
Republican 13 22 29 34 1 1
Independent 41 23 17 18 1 0
Democrat 86 10 1 3 1 0

Table 33 shows the trend since 2021 in 2020 election confidence.

Table 33: How confident are you that, here in Wisconsin, the votes for president were accurately cast and counted in the 2020 election? (Among registered voters.)

Poll dates Very confident Somewhat confident Not too confident Not at all confident Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 46 19 16 18 1 0
8/10-15/22 48 18 15 17 2 1
6/14-20/22 51 16 11 21 0 0
4/19-24/22 48 16 12 23 1 0
2/22-27/22 48 19 11 19 2 0
10/26-31/21 47 18 12 19 3 0
8/3-8/21 48 19 15 16 1 0

Table 34 shows opinion of former President Donald Trump overall and by party identification in the September survey. A substantial majority of Republicans hold a favorable view of Trump, while majorities of independents and Democrats have an unfavorable opinion of him.

Table 34: Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Donald Trump, or haven’t you heard enough about him yet? (Total and by party identification, among registered voters.)

Party ID Favorable Unfavorable Haven’t heard enough Don’t know Refused
Total 38 58 1 3 0
Republican 79 16 0 4 0
Independent 32 63 1 3 1
Democrat 4 94 0 1 0

Views of Trump have barely changed since 2021, as shown in Table 35.

Table 35: Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Donald Trump, or haven’t you heard enough about him yet? (Among registered voters.)

Poll dates Favorable Unfavorable Haven’t heard enough Don’t know Refused
9/6-11/22 38 58 1 3 0
8/10-15/22 38 57 1 4 0
6/14-20/22 39 56 3 2 0
4/19-24/22 36 58 2 3 1
2/22-27/22 36 57 2 3 2
10/26-31/21 38 57 2 3 0
8/3-8/21 38 55 3 4 1

 About the Marquette Law School Poll

The Marquette Law School Poll is the most extensive statewide polling project in Wisconsin history. This poll interviewed 801 registered Wisconsin voters by landline or cell phone, Sept. 6-11, 2022. The margin of error is +/-4.3 percentage points for the full sample. The margin of error for likely voters is +/-4.9 percentage points

Some issue items were asked of half the sample. Those on Form A were asked of 399 and have a margin of error of +/- 6 percentage points. Form B items were asked of 402 and have a margin of error of +/- 6.1 percentage points.

Items asked of half-samples include on Form A the issues of public schools, inflation, abortion policy, taxes, gun violence, and crime. Form B items concern the coronavirus pandemic, illegal immigration, climate change, and ensuring an accurate vote count. Form B also included items on property taxes and school spending, and the closing of schools and businesses at the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic.

The partisan makeup of the sample, including those who lean to a party, is 45% Republican, 44% Democratic, and 10% independent. The partisan makeup of the sample, excluding those who lean to a party, is 30% Republican, 29% Democratic, and 41% independent.

Since January 2020, the long-term partisan balance, including those who lean to a party, in the Marquette Law School Poll has been 45% Republican and 44% Democratic, with 9% independent. Partisanship excluding those who lean has been 30% Republican and 28% Democratic, with 41% independent.

The entire questionnaire, methodology statement, full results, and breakdowns by demographic groups are available at law.marquette.edu/poll/results-and-data.

NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. It has not been verified for its accuracy or completeness.

One thought on “New Marquette Law School Poll of Wisconsin voters finds Johnson and Evers holding slim leads as races for senator and governor tighten”

  1. mkwagner says:

    Johnson is up to his old tricks. He campaigns like he is the challenger, instead an incumbent who contributed to the mess this country is in.
    However, when you think about it, Johnson really doesn’t have a record to stand on. Instead, he and the wealthy shadow PACs that support him, resort to slandering his opponent with racist imagery, slurs, and innuendos. Johnson has demonstrated time and again that he has no integrity. The recent ads demonstrate the depths his campaign are willing to go to maintain his power.
    What Wisconsin votes need to ask themselves: am I willing to vote for a candidate who has lined his own pockets at the expense of struggling Wisconsinites? Are you willing to return to the Senate a candidate who lies to cover his own culpability; one who knowingly spreads misinformation to incite confusion and fear (resulting in over 1 million Americans dead due to COVID and the inflation we all are experiencing;) a leader who openly supports deficit spending when it benefits himself but rails against any spending that supports struggling working class families.
    Wisconsin needs leaders who work for us, not ones who have no problem tossing out the US Constitution for personal profit.

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