MILWAUKEE —With 14 months to go until the 2020 presidential election, former Vice President
Joe Biden is favored by 51 percent and President Donald Trump by 42 percent
among Wisconsin registered voters in a potential match. Four percent say they
would not support either candidate and 2 percent say they don’t know. This is
the first Marquette Law School Poll of 2019 that has asked head-to-head vote
choices for potential 2020 nominees.
In a
match with Sen. Bernie Sanders, Sanders receives 48 percent and Trump 44
percent, with 5 percent supporting neither and 2 percent who don’t know.
When
matched against Trump, Sen. Elizabeth Warren is the choice of 45 percent and
Trump is the choice of 45 percent, with 5 percent supporting neither and 5
percent saying they don’t know.
Sen.
Kamala Harris is supported by 44 percent to Trump’s 44 percent, while 6 percent
support neither and 6 percent say they don’t know.
A summary
of the general election matches is shown in Table 1.
Table 1: General Election Matches
Match
|
Pct
|
Match
|
Pct
|
Match
|
Pct
|
Match
|
Pct
|
Joe
Biden
|
51
|
Bernie
Sanders
|
48
|
Elizabeth
Warren
|
45
|
Kamala
Harris
|
44
|
Donald
Trump
|
42
|
Donald
Trump
|
44
|
Donald
Trump
|
45
|
Donald
Trump
|
44
|
Neither
|
4
|
Neither
|
5
|
Neither
|
5
|
Neither
|
6
|
Don’t
know
|
2
|
Don’t
know
|
2
|
Don’t
know
|
5
|
Don’t
know
|
6
|
The poll
was conducted Aug. 25-29, 2019. The sample included 800 registered voters in
Wisconsin interviewed by cell phone or landline, with a margin of error of +/-
3.9 percentage points.
Democratic
presidential candidate preference items were asked of Democrats, independents
who lean Democratic, and independents who do not lean to either party. That
sample size is 444 with a margin of error of +/-5.3 percentage points.
Four
issue-related questions were asked of half the sample (Form A) and four were
asked of the other half-sample (Form B). Questions on Form A have a sample size
of 400 and a margin of error of +/- 5.6 percentage points. Questions on Form B
have a sample size of 400 and a margin of error of +/- 5.5 percentage points.
Democratic Presidential Primary
Candidates
Among
Democrats, independents who lean Democratic, and independents who do not lean
to either party (hereafter “the Democratic primary sample”), Biden receives the
most support for the April 2020 presidential primary. Biden is the first choice
of 28 percent, followed by Sanders at 20 percent, Warren at 17 percent and Pete
Buttigieg at 6 percent. Harris receives 3 percent, while all other candidates
receive 2 percent or less.
The complete
results for the Democratic primary are shown in Table 2.
Table 2: First and second choice in the
Democratic primary sample (Democrats, independents who lean Democratic and independents
without a partisan lean).
|
Response
|
First Choice
|
Second Choice
|
Joe Biden
|
28
|
18
|
Bernie Sanders
|
20
|
13
|
Elizabeth Warren
|
17
|
20
|
Pete Buttigieg
|
6
|
10
|
Kamala Harris
|
3
|
11
|
Andrew Yang
|
2
|
2
|
Cory Booker
|
1
|
3
|
Kirsten Gillibrand
|
1
|
1
|
Amy Klobuchar
|
1
|
2
|
Tom Steyer
|
1
|
0
|
Steve Bullock
|
1
|
0
|
Beto O’Rourke
|
1
|
1
|
Tulsi Gabbard
|
0
|
2
|
John Delaney
|
0
|
1
|
Michael Bennet
|
0
|
0
|
Tim Ryan
|
0
|
0
|
Julián Castro
|
0
|
1
|
Marianne Williamson
|
0
|
0
|
Bill de Blasio
|
0
|
0
|
Wayne Messam
|
0
|
0
|
Joe Sestak
|
0
|
0
|
Someone else (VOL)
|
1
|
0
|
Would not vote (VOL)
|
2
|
1
|
Don’t know
|
13
|
13
|
Refused
|
1
|
0
|
Among the
Democratic primary sample, favorability of five candidates is shown in Table 3.
Table 3: Favorability ratings of five candidates
among Democratic primary sample
|
Favorable
|
Unfavorable
|
Haven’t heard enough
|
Don’t know
|
Joe
Biden
|
70
|
20
|
8
|
2
|
Bernie
Sanders
|
63
|
21
|
11
|
5
|
Elizabeth
Warren
|
53
|
12
|
27
|
7
|
Pete
Buttigieg
|
37
|
7
|
45
|
11
|
Kamala
Harris
|
35
|
14
|
41
|
10
|
Economic outlook and issues
Wisconsin
registered voters hold a net positive view of the performance of the economy
over the past 12 months, with 37 percent saying the economy has improved over
the past year, 25 percent saying it has worsened, and 34 percent saying it has
stayed the same.
By
contrast, the outlook for the next year is not net positive, with 26 percent
saying the economy will improve, while 37 percent think it will get worse and
33 percent saying the economy will remain the same.
The
outlook for the coming year among those polled in 2019 is less favorable than
among those polled in 2018 as more respondents now see the prospect of a
worsening economy. The August poll is the second in 2019 that has seen net
pessimism about the economic outlook. The previous net negative reading was in
January 2019, during the federal government shutdown.
In 2018,
the average future outlook was 14.7 percent net positive, while in 2019 the
average outlook has been net negative -3 percent.
The full
results since February 2018 are shown in Table 4.
Table 4: Outlook for the economy over next year
Poll
Date
|
Get
better
|
Get
worse
|
Stay
the same
|
Don’t
know
|
Net
|
2018-02-25
|
37
|
20
|
38
|
5
|
17
|
2018-06-13
|
35
|
25
|
37
|
3
|
10
|
2018-8-15
|
38
|
25
|
31
|
5
|
13
|
2018-9-12
|
37
|
24
|
34
|
5
|
13
|
2018-10-3
|
42
|
20
|
32
|
7
|
22
|
2018-10-24
|
38
|
25
|
29
|
8
|
13
|
2019-1-16
|
29
|
34
|
30
|
6
|
-5
|
2019-4-3
|
34
|
27
|
34
|
5
|
7
|
2019-8-25
|
26
|
37
|
33
|
5
|
-11
|
Forty-five
percent approve of the job Trump is doing as president, with 53 percent
disapproving. That is little changed from April when 46 percent approved and 52
percent disapproved.
Forty-nine
percent of those polled approve of Trump’s handling of the economy, while 50
percent disapprove.
Partisanship
strongly affects views of both the economy and Trump’s handling of it. In Table
5, 41 percent of Republican and independents who lean Republican think the
economy will improve over the next 12 months, 42 percent think it will stay the
same and 12 percent think it will worsen.
In
contrast, among Democrats and independents who lean Democratic, 12 percent
think the economy will improve, 23 percent think it will remain the same, and
63 percent think the economy will worsen.
Twenty-one
percent of independents who do not lean to a party expect the economy to
improve, 37 percent think it will stay the same and 33 percent expect an
economic downturn.
Table 5: Economic Outlook (Next 12 Months) by Party
Identification
|
Get
better
|
Get
worse
|
Stay
the same
|
Don’t
know
|
Republican
|
41
|
12
|
42
|
5
|
Democrat
|
12
|
63
|
23
|
2
|
Independent
|
21
|
33
|
37
|
9
|
Table 6
shows approval of Trump’s handling of the economy by party. While Republicans
and Democrats are near-mirror images of each other, independents on balance
disapprove of Trump’s handing of the economy.
Table 6: Trump Economic Job Approval by Party Identification
|
Approve
|
Disapprove
|
Don’t
know
|
Republican
|
88
|
11
|
0
|
Democrat
|
9
|
89
|
1
|
Independent
|
43
|
51
|
6
|
Tariffs
on Chinese imports were raised on Sept. 1, after the poll was completed, although
the tariff increase was announced by Trump on Twitter on Aug. 23 before
interviews began on Aug. 25. Respondents were asked if imposing tariffs or fees
on products imported from other countries helps the U.S. economy, hurts the
economy or doesn’t make much of a difference either way. Thirty percent say
tariffs help the economy, 46 percent say they hurt the economy, and 17 percent
say tariffs don’t make much difference either way.
Table 7
shows views of tariffs by party identification, including leaners as partisans.
Table 7: Impact of tariffs on economy by party identification
|
Helps
US economy
|
Hurts
US economy
|
Doesn’t
make much difference
|
Don’t
know
|
Republican
|
47
|
21
|
22
|
8
|
Democrat
|
12
|
72
|
13
|
3
|
Independent
|
34
|
47
|
15
|
3
|
Gun
legislation and opinion
This poll
was completed after the mass shootings in El Paso, Texas, on Aug. 3 and in
Dayton, Ohio, on Aug. 4, but before the mass shooting in Odessa and Midland,
Texas, on Aug. 31. Opinion on potential changes to gun laws has changed little
from previous polling on gun issues.
Table 8
shows the trend in support and opposition to universal background checks for
firearm sales.
Table 8: Trend in support or opposition to
background checks
Poll
Date
|
Support
|
Oppose
|
Don’t
know
|
2013-3-13
|
81
|
17
|
2
|
2013-5-9
|
71
|
26
|
2
|
2016-1-24
|
85
|
12
|
2
|
2018-02-25
|
81
|
16
|
2
|
2019-8-25
|
80
|
16
|
3
|
Note: a Prior to 2019 options were ‘Favor’ or
‘Oppose’
Households
with guns are only a little less supportive of background checks than those
without a gun. Seventy-five percent of respondents from households with a gun
support background checks, while 88 percent of those without a gun do so. Those
who refuse to say if there is a gun in the household are more opposed to
background checks. Six percent of respondents refused to say if there was a gun
in the household. These results are shown in Table 9.
Table 9: Support or oppose background checks by gun
in household (August 2019)
Gun
Household
|
Support
|
Oppose
|
Don’t
know
|
Yes
|
75
|
22
|
3
|
No
|
88
|
8
|
3
|
Refused
|
69
|
27
|
5
|
“Red-flag”
laws that would allow police to take away guns from people who have been found
by a judge to be a danger to themselves or others are supported by 81 percent
and opposed by 12 percent. Eighty-one percent of respondents in households with
a gun support such red-flag laws as do 86 percent of those without a gun in the
household. Those refusing to say if there is a gun in the household are less
supportive of red-flag laws, as shown in Table 10. This question has not been
asked before in the Marquette Law School Poll.
Table 10: Support or oppose red-flag law by gun in
household (August 2019)
Gun
Household
|
Support
|
Oppose
|
Don’t
know
|
Yes
|
81
|
13
|
7
|
No
|
86
|
9
|
6
|
Refused
|
46
|
25
|
29
|
Support
for a ban on “assault-style weapons” is lower than support for background
checks or red-flag laws. Table 11 shows the trend in support or opposition to a
ban on assault-style weapons, and Table 12 shows the views of residents in
households with or without a gun.
Table 11: Trend in support or opposition to ban on
`assault-style weapons’
Poll
Date
|
Support
|
Oppose
|
Don’t
know
|
2013-3-13
|
54
|
43
|
3
|
2018-02-25
|
56
|
40
|
3
|
2019-8-25
|
57
|
40
|
3
|
Note: a Prior to 2019 options were ‘Favor’ or
‘Oppose’
Table 12: Support or oppose ban on `assault-style
weapons’ by gun in household (August 2019)
Gun
Household
|
Support
|
Oppose
|
Don’t
know
|
Yes
|
49
|
50
|
2
|
No
|
71
|
26
|
3
|
Refused
|
16
|
66
|
14
|
Feelings
toward the National Rifle Association (NRA) were measured on a 100-point
“feeling thermometer” where 100 means very warm or favorable feelings, zero
means very cold or unfavorable feelings, while a score of 50 means neither
favorable nor unfavorable feelings. Respondents can assign any score between 0
and 100.
Overall,
the average score for the NRA was 50.2.
Average
feelings toward the NRA are shown in Table 13 for men and women in urban,
suburban and rural areas.
The
average rating of the NRA is the approximately the same for urban and suburban
men, and several points higher among rural men. Women in urban areas are about
10 points less favorable to the NRA than are urban men. Suburban women are 12
points less favorable than suburban men. Women in rural areas, however, are
equally favorable to the NRA as are rural men.
Table 13: Average ‘feeling thermometer’ score for
the National Rifle Association by gender and urban-suburban-rural residence
|
Urban
|
Suburban
|
Rural
|
Male
|
52.3
|
51.7
|
57.8
|
Female
|
41.7
|
39.7
|
58.4
|
Views of a diverse society and
immigrants
Sixty-five
percent of respondents think an increasingly diverse population of different
races, ethnic groups and nationalities makes the United States a better place
to live. Four percent think this makes the U.S. a worse place, and 27 percent
think it doesn’t make much difference. When last asked in October 2016, 53
percent said an increasingly diverse population made the U.S. better, 9 percent
said it made the country worse, and 35 percent said it made little difference.
Asked to
rate immigrants on the 0-to-100 point “feeling thermometer,” the average score
given to “legal immigrants” was 78.8, while the average rating for “illegal
immigrants” was 42.5.
The
average thermometer score given to “Muslims” was 63.1, while that given to
“evangelical Christians” was 58.6. Muslims were rated on average between 59 and
68 on the “feeling thermometer” by each of four religious groups, while
evangelicals were rated over 75 by evangelicals, but at 33 by those without a
religion. Mainline Protestant and Roman Catholic respondents gave evangelical
Christians similar 59 and 61 average ratings respectively.
Views of racial disparity
A
majority of respondents, 53 percent, agree that there is a lot of
discrimination against blacks in the U.S., while 45 percent disagree.
A larger
majority, 62 percent, disagree with a statement that racial disparities are
only a matter of effort and that “if blacks would only try harder they could be
just as well off as whites.” Thirty percent agree with a statement that black
disadvantage is a matter of effort.
A
minority, 41 percent, agree with a statement that blacks have gotten less than
they deserve over the past few years, with 51 percent disagreeing with that
statement.
A
majority of respondents, 58 percent, say that Hispanic people have the same
chance of getting ahead as people from most other ethnic backgrounds.
Twenty-seven percent say Hispanic people have a worse chance of getting ahead,
and 10 percent say they have a better chance.
Water-quality issues
Forty-three
percent of respondents say they are very or somewhat concerned about the safety
of their community’s water supply, while 57 percent say they are not too
concerned or not at all concerned.
Fifty-two
percent say the state of Wisconsin is doing an excellent or good job protecting
the safety of public drinking water, while 39 percent say the state is doing a
fair or poor job.
A
substantial majority of respondents, 74 percent, say the state should provide
financial support for replacing lead pipes between water mains and residences
because of the health risks posed by lead pipes. Sixteen percent say this cost
should be paid entirely by the owner of the residence.
Opinion of the governor and
legislature
Governor
Tony Evers’ job approval stands at 54 percent, with disapproval at 34 percent.
Ten percent say they don’t have an opinion. In April, 47 percent approved, 37
percent disapproved, and 15 percent lacked an opinion.
Approval
of the job the Wisconsin legislature is doing is 52 percent and disapproval is
38 percent, with 8 percent saying they don’t know. In April, 50 percent
approved, 38 percent disapproved, and 11 percent lacked an opinion.
State of the state
Fifty-five
percent of respondents say the state is headed in the right direction, while 37
percent say it is off on the wrong track. In April, 52 percent said the state
was going in the right direction and 40 percent said it was on the wrong track.
Table 14
presents the favorability ratings of elected officials in Wisconsin and the
percentage of respondents who haven’t heard enough or say they don’t know.
Table 14: Favorability ratings of elected officials
|
Favorable
|
Unfavorable
|
Haven’t
heard enough
|
Don’t
know
|
Tony Evers
|
49
|
35
|
11
|
5
|
Tammy Baldwin
|
44
|
40
|
13
|
3
|
Donald Trump
|
42
|
53
|
1
|
3
|
Ron Johnson
|
40
|
29
|
25
|
6
|
Scott Fitzgerald
|
19
|
20
|
49
|
12
|
Robin Vos
|
15
|
20
|
52
|
13
|
About the Marquette Law School Poll
The
Marquette Law School Poll is the most extensive statewide polling project in
Wisconsin history. This poll interviewed 800 registered Wisconsin voters by
landline or cell phone, Aug. 25-29, 2019. The margin of error is +/-3.9
percentage points for the full sample.
The
Democratic presidential candidate preference items were asked of Democrats,
independents who lean Democratic and independents who do not lean to either
party. That sample size is 444 with a margin of error of +/-5.3 percentage
points.
Four questions
were asked of half the sample (Form A) and four were asked of the other
half-sample (Form B). Questions on Form A have a sample size of 400 and a
margin of error of +/- 5.6 percentage points. Questions on Form B have a sample
size of 400 and a margin of error of +/- 5.5 percentage points. (The small
difference in margin of error is due to rounding of the 2nd decimal point after
weighting the half-samples.)
Form A
questions were right direction or wrong track for the state and three items on
water quality issues. Form B questions were approval of the state legislature
and three gun-related issues.
The
partisan makeup of the sample, including those who lean to a party, is 46
percent Republican, 45 percent Democratic and 8 percent independent. The partisan
makeup of the sample, excluding those who lean to a party, is 26 percent
Republican, 28 percent Democratic and 46 percent independent.
Since
January 2017, the long-term partisan balance, including those who lean to a
party, in the Marquette poll has been 45 percent Republican and 45 percent
Democratic, with 9 percent independent. Partisanship, excluding those who lean,
has been 30 percent Republican and 29 percent Democratic, with 40 percent
independent.
The entire questionnaire, methodology statement, full results, and
breakdowns by demographic groups, are available at law.marquette.edu/poll/results-and-data.