Contact:            Kevin Conway

                        Associate Director of University Communication

                        (414) 288-4745 – office

                        (414) 202-9329 – mobile

                        kevin.m.conway@marquette.edu

MILWAUKEE — With just more than five months until Wisconsin’s Aug. 9 primary election, a new Marquette Law School Poll survey of state voters finds that about half of both Republican and Democratic voters say they don’t know whom they support in the races for the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate and the Republican nomination for governor.

Small percentages of voters have opinions about any of the candidates with two exceptions. Even in the case of those two candidates, no more than half of voters have an opinion, favorable or unfavorable.

The poll finds 51% of registered voters saying they don’t know whom they will support in the Republican primary for governor or the Democratic primary for U.S. Senate. Forty-six percent say they support one of the current candidates, with the remainder saying they won’t vote in a primary or will vote for someone else or declining to say.

It is not unusual to see half of registered voters undecided with more than five months to go before the primary, but the high percentage of undecided is a vivid reminder that the primaries are not uppermost in voters’ minds at this point. Among those who say they are “very enthusiastic” about voting this year, 53% have a primary-vote choice, but 43% say they don’t know whom they will support. Among those less enthusiastic about voting, 35% have a chosen candidate and 63% don’t know whom they will support.

This poll interviewed 802 registered Wisconsin voters by landline or cell phone Feb. 22-27, 2022. The margin of error is +/-3.8 percentage points for the full sample. Some items were asked of half the sample. Primary-vote choices have a sample size of 363 for the Republican primary and 354 for the Democratic primary, with margins of error of +/-5.8 and +/-5.7 for the Republican and Democratic primaries respectively. Republican primary voters include Republicans and independents who lean Republican plus independents who do not lean to either party but who say they will vote in the Republican primary; similarly for “Democratic primary voters.”

Republican and Democratic primary voters are about equally unsure of their primary preferences. In the Republican gubernatorial primary, 54% are unsure of their choice, and 48% of Democratic voters unsure of their U.S. Senate primary vote.

The candidates are not yet familiar to most voters. Table 1 shows the percentage of voters who say they haven’t heard enough or can’t give a favorable or unfavorable opinion with respect to each Republican primary candidate. Rebecca Kleefisch is the best known, although half of voters are unable to say if they have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of her. Some 80% lack an opinion of Kevin Nicholson, and 86% are unable to rate Tim Ramthun. The candidates are only a little better known among Republicans and independents who say they will vote in the Republican primary, as shown in Table 2.

Table 1: Name recognition and favorability of Republican candidates, among all registered voters

Name Haven’t heard or don’t know Favorable Unfavorable
Rebecca Kleefisch 50 23 26
Kevin Nicholson 80 10 9
Tim Ramthun 86 4 9

Table 2: Name recognition and favorability of Republican candidates, among Republicans and independents voting in the Republican primary

Name   Haven’t heard or don’t know Favorable Unfavorable
Rebecca Kleefisch 50 39 10
Kevin Nicholson 73 18 8
Tim Ramthun 84 5 10

Kleefisch and Nicholson have run for political office previously and were better known during those campaigns. Table 3 shows Kleefisch’s favorability in Marquette Law School Poll surveys since 2012, and Table 4 shows Nicholson’s ratings during his 2018 primary campaign for U.S. Senate.

Table 3: Trend in Kleefisch name recognition and favorability, among all registered voters

Poll dates Haven’t heard or don’t know Favorable Unfavorable
May 9-12, 2012 44 25 31
May 23-26, 2012 36 30 33
Oct. 9-12, 2014 45 29 25
Sept. 24-28, 2015 49 21 29
Oct. 3-7, 2018 42 32 26
Oct. 24-28, 2018 40 32 27
Feb. 22-27, 2022 50 23 26

Table 4: Trend in Nicholson name recognition and favorability, among all registered voters

Poll dates Haven’t heard or don’t know Favorable Unfavorable
Feb. 25-3/1, 2018 85 7 7
June 13-17, 2018 69 18 13
July 11-15, 2018 69 17 14
Feb. 22-27, 2022 80 10 9

Among Democratic primary candidates, Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes is the best known, followed by Alex Lasry, although both are unfamiliar to more than 60% of registered voters, as shown in Table 5. Table 6 shows familiarity and favorability among Democrats and independents who say they will vote in the Democratic primary.

Table 5: Name recognition and favorability of Democratic candidates, among all registered voters

Name Haven’t heard or don’t know Favorable Unfavorable
Mandela Barnes 62 22 14
Alex Lasry 73 16 10
Tom Nelson 85 7 8
Sarah Godlewski 88 5 6
Chantia Lewis 90 4 5
Darrell Williams 93 3 3
Adam Murphy 93 3 3
Gillian Battino* 93 3 3
Kou Lee 93 3 3
Jeff Rumbaugh 94 3 3
Steven Olikara 94 2 3
Peter Peckarsky 94 1 5
* Note: Battino dropped out of the senate primary after the poll began.

Table 6: Name recognition and favorability of Democratic candidates, among Democrats and independents voting in the Democratic primary

Name Haven’t heard or don’t know Favorable Unfavorable
Mandela Barnes 53 43 4
Alex Lasry 65 29 6
Tom Nelson 81 11 7
Sarah Godlewski 84 10 6
Chantia Lewis 89 7 3
Kou Lee 92 5 2
Peter Peckarsky 93 2 4
Darrell Williams 94 4 2
Jeff Rumbaugh 94 3 3
Steven Olikara 94 3 2
Gillian Battino* 95 4 2
Adam Murphy 95 3 2
* Note: Battino dropped out of the senate primary after the poll began

Barnes’ familiarity and favorability have been measured in four Marquette polls since 2018, with the trend shown in Table 7.

Table 7: Trend in Barnes’ name recognition and favorability, among all registered voters

Poll dates Haven’t heard or don’t know Favorable Unfavorable
Oct. 3-7, 2018 76 14 9
Oct. 24-28, 2018 78 13 8
Jan. 16-20, 2019 76 16 7
Feb. 22-27, 2022 62 22 14

Primary vote choice

The best-known candidates are leading their respective primaries at this early stage of the campaign. Among Republicans and independents who say they will vote in the Republican primary, Rebecca Kleefisch is the choice of 30%, Kevin Nicholson is preferred by 8%, Tim Ramthun is supported by 5%, and 54% say they don’t know whom they will vote for. Table 8 shows all response categories.

Table 8: Vote choice in Republican gubernatorial primary, among Republicans and independents who say they will vote in the Republican primary

Response Percent
Rebecca Kleefisch 30
Kevin Nicholson 8
Tim Ramthun 5
Someone else 1
Will not vote in Republican primary 1
Don’t know 54
Refused 2

In the Democratic U.S. Senate primary, Mandela Barnes is supported by 23%, Alex Lasry is supported by 13%, Tom Nelson is the choice of 5%, and Sarah Godlewski is preferred by 3%. The full set of candidate preferences is shown in Table 9.

Table 9: Vote choice in Democratic gubernatorial primary, among Democrats and independents who say they will vote in the Democratic primary, by percentage (*=less than .5%)

Response Percent
Mandela Barnes 23
Alex Lasry 13
Tom Nelson 5
Sarah Godlewski 3
Chantia Lewis 2
Adam Murphy 2
Gillian Battino** 1
Peter Pecarsky *
Darrell Williams *
Kou Lee 0
Steven Olikara 0
Jeff Rumbaugh 0
Won’t vote in this primary 3
Don’t know 48
** Note: Battino dropped out of the senate primary after the poll began.

Approval ratings

Forty-three percent of voters approve of the job President Joe Biden is doing, 52% disapprove, and 3% say they don’t know. The trend in Biden’s approval is shown in Table 10.

Table 10: Biden approval trend, August 2021-February 2022

Poll dates Approve Disapprove Don’t know Refused
Aug. 3-8, 2021 49 46 4 0
Oct. 26-31, 2021 43 53 4 1
Feb. 22-27, 2022 43 52 3 2

Gov. Tony Evers’ job approval stands at 50%, while 41% disapprove. When last measured in October 2021, 45% approved and 46% disapproved. The trend in Evers’ job approval is shown in Table 11.

Table 11: Evers approval trend, January 2019-February 2022

Poll dates Approve Disapprove Don’t know Refused
Jan. 16-20, 2019 39 22 38 1
April 3-7, 2019 47 37 15 0
Aug. 25-29, 2019 54 34 10 1
Oct. 13-17, 2019 52 34 13 1
Nov. 13-17, 2019 47 42 10 1
Dec. 3-8, 2019 50 38 11 1
Jan. 8-12, 2020 51 40 9 0
Feb. 19-23, 2020 51 38 10 1
March 24-29, 2020 65 29 6 1
May 3-7, 2020 59 33 7 1
June 14-18, 2020 54 38 6 1
Aug. 4-9, 2020 57 37 6 0
Aug. 30-9/3, 2020 51 43 5 2
Sept. 30-Oct. 4, 2020 52 42 5 1
Oct. 21-25, 2020 50 43 7 0
Aug. 3-8, 2021 50 43 7 0
Oct. 26-31, 2021 45 46 8 1
Feb. 22-27, 2022 50 41 8 1

The Wisconsin legislature has a job approval rate of 37%, while 46% disapprove and 16% say they don’t know. The trend in approval of the legislature is shown in Table 12.

Table 12: Approval of the Wisconsin legislature trend, January 2019-February 2022

Poll dates Approve Disapprove Don’t know Refused
Jan. 16-20, 2019 52 31 16 1
April 3-7, 2019 50 38 11 1
Aug. 25-29, 2019 52 38 8 1
Nov. 13-17, 2019 48 39 13 0
Feb. 19-23, 2020 46 40 13 1
May 3-7, 2020 46 40 13 1
Oct. 21-25, 2020 36 50 13 1
Aug. 3-8, 2021 39 48 13 1
Oct. 26-31, 2021 38 48 14 1
Feb. 22-27, 2022 37 46 16 2

Favorability

Sen. Ron Johnson is viewed favorably by 33% of voters and unfavorably by 45%, with 21% saying they haven’t heard enough or don’t know. The trend in favorability for Johnson since 2019 is shown in Table 13.

Table 13: Johnson favorability trend, January 2019-February 2022

Poll dates Favorable Unfavorable Haven’t heard enough Don’t know Refused
Jan. 16-20/19 44 28 23 5 0
April 3-7/19 40 32 24 5 0
Aug. 25-29, 2019 40 29 25 6 0
Oct. 13-17, 2019 40 29 24 6 0
Nov. 13-17, 2019 39 29 24 7 0
Dec. 3-8, 2019 36 34 26 4 1
Jan. 8-12, 2020 39 29 28 3 0
Feb. 19-23, 2020 37 34 24 5 1
March 24-29, 2020 35 32 29 4 0
May 3-7, 2020 38 34 23 5 1
June 14-18, 2020 35 32 29 3 0
Aug. 4-9, 2020 33 35 27 4 0
Aug. 30-Sept. 3, 2020 32 36 28 5 0
Sept. 30-Oct. 4, 2020 35 31 27 7 0
Oct. 21-25, 2020 38 36 23 3 1
Aug. 3-8, 2021 35 42 20 3 0
Oct. 26-31, 2021 36 42 18 4 0
Feb. 22-27, 2022 33 45 17 4 1

Sen. Tammy Baldwin is rated favorably by 42% of voters and unfavorably by 36%, with 21% lacking an opinion of her. The trend in favorability to Baldwin since 2019 is shown in Table 14.

Table 14: Baldwin favorability trend, January 2019-February 2022

Poll dates Favorable Unfavorable Haven’t heard enough Don’t know Refused
Jan. 16-20, 2019 45 41 11 3 0
April 3-7, 2019 44 43 10 3 0
Aug. 25-29, 2019 44 40 13 3 0
Oct. 13-17, 2019 46 39 11 3 0
Nov. 13-17, 2019 39 43 12 5 1
Dec. 3-8, 2019 42 39 14 3 1
Jan. 8-12, 2020 44 40 13 2 0
Feb. 19-23, 2020 43 40 13 3 1
March 24-29, 2020 40 39 16 4 0
May 3-7, 2020 45 37 14 3 1
June 14-18, 2020 40 38 19 3 0
Aug. 4-9, 2020 43 36 17 3 0
Aug. 30-Sept. 3, 2020 42 35 19 3 1
Sept. 30-Oct. 4, 2020 41 35 20 3 0
Oct. 21-25, 2020 44 36 15 4 0
Aug. 3-8, 2021 40 38 19 3 0
Oct. 26-31, 2021 38 39 19 3 0
Feb. 22-27, 2022 42 36 18 3 1

Assembly Speaker Robin Vos is not well-known statewide, despite his position and tenure as a legislative leader. This is in part a reflection of the fact that each member of the 99-seat Assembly represents just over 1% of the state population and is seldom well-known outside his or her district. Overall, 13% of Wisconsin voters have a favorable view of Vos, 28% have an unfavorable opinion, and 59% say they haven’t heard enough or don’t know. The trend in favorability to Vos is shown in Table 15.

Table 15: Vos favorability trend, January 2019-February 2022

Poll dates Favorable Unfavorable Haven’t heard enough Don’t know Refused
Jan. 16-20, 2019 13 17 59 11 0
April 3-7, 2019 14 21 56 10 0
Aug. 25-29, 2019 15 20 52 13 0
Feb. 22-27, 2022 13 28 50 9 1

Unfavorability to Vos among Republicans and independents has increased a bit since 2019. The trends by party are shown in Table 16.

Table 16: Vos favorability by party trend, January 2019-February 2022

Party ID Poll dates Favorable Unfavorable Haven’t heard enough Don’t know Refused
Republican Jan. 16-20, 2019 21 6 62 11 0
Republican April 3-7, 2019 22 6 60 11 0
Republican Aug. 25-29, 2019 26 7 53 14 0
Republican Feb. 22-27, 2022 21 16 56 7 1
Independent Jan. 16-20, 2019 11 11 61 17 0
Independent April 3-7, 2019 11 18 56 13 2
Independent Aug. 25-29, 2019 6 20 65 9 0
Independent Feb. 22-27, 2022 4 22 55 15 3
Democrat Jan. 16-20, 2019 4 30 56 9 0
Democrat April 3-7, 2019 5 37 51 7 0
Democrat Aug. 25-29, 2019 5 32 50 12 0
Democrat Feb. 22-27, 2022 8 41 42 8 1

Favorability to former President Donald Trump is at 36%, with an unfavorable opinion at 57% and 5% not expressing an opinion. Trump’s favorability trend is shown in Table 17.

Table 17: Trump favorability trend, January 2019-February 2022

Poll dates Favorable Unfavorable Haven’t heard enough Don’t know Refused
Jan. 16-20, 2019 42 53 2 3 0
April 3-7, 2019 45 51 1 2 1
Aug. 25-29, 2019 42 53 1 3 1
Oct. 13-17, 2019 43 52 1 3 1
Nov. 13-17, 2019 46 50 2 1 1
Dec. 3-8, 2019 45 50 2 2 2
Jan. 8-12, 2020 46 51 0 1 1
Feb. 19-23, 2020 45 50 3 2 0
March 24-29, 2020 45 50 2 3 0
May 3-7, 2020 44 51 2 2 1
June 14-18, 2020 42 54 2 2 1
Aug. 4-9, 2020 42 55 2 1 0
Aug. 30-Sept. 3, 2020 42 54 2 1 1
Sept. 30-Oct. 4, 2020 42 53 2 2 0
Oct. 21-25, 2020 44 54 1 1 1
Aug. 3-8, 2021 38 55 3 4 1
Oct. 26-31, 2021 38 57 2 3 0
Feb. 22-27, 2022 36 57 2 3 2

Direction of the state

Thirty-nine percent of voters say the state of Wisconsin is headed in the right direction, while 53% say it is on the wrong track. In October 2021, 41% said it was moving in the right direction and 51% said it was on the wrong track. Negative views rose sharply in 2021 and have remained little changed. The trend in this opinion is shown in Table 18.

Table 18: Right direction or wrong track trend, January 2019-February 2022

Poll dates Right direction Wrong track Don’t know Refused
Jan. 16-20, 2019 57 33 10 0
April 3-7, 2019 52 40 8 0
Aug. 25-29, 2019 55 37 8 0
Oct. 13-17, 2019 53 39 7 1
Jan. 8-12, 2020 46 47 6 1
Feb. 19-23, 2020 52 39 8 0
Mar. 24-29, 2020 61 30 9 1
Aug. 3-8, 2021 39 52 9 0
Oct. 26-31, 2021 41 51 7 1
Feb. 22-27, 2022 39 53 8 1

Issue concerns

There is a high level of concern over inflation, with 68% saying they are very concerned and 28% saying they are somewhat concerned. Only 4% are not too concerned or not at all concerned about inflation. Worries about inflation rose from August to October 2021, and are up slightly in February 2022, as shown in Table 19.

Table 19: Concern over inflation trend, August 2021-February 2022

Poll dates Very concerned Somewhat concerned Not too concerned Not at all concerned Don’t know Refused
Aug. 3-8, 2021 49 35 11 3 0 0
Oct. 26-31, 2021 64 28 6 1 0 0
Feb. 22-27, 2022 68 28 3 1 0 0

Thirty-one percent said they are very concerned about unemployment, with 35% somewhat concerned, 20% not too concerned, and 13% not at all concerned. This question was not asked earlier. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Wisconsin’s unemployment rate was 2.8% in December 2021, the most recent available estimate before this survey.

Concern over illegal immigration has fluctuated but is currently about the same as in August 2021. The full trend is shown in Table 20.

Table 20: Concern over illegal immigration trend, August 2021-February 2022

Poll dates Very concerned Somewhat concerned Not too concerned Not at all concerned Don’t know Refused
Aug. 3-8, 2021 37 24 21 18 0 0
Oct. 26-31, 2021 43 25 19 12 1 0
Feb. 22-27, 2022 36 24 19 20 1 0

Concern over the coronavirus “here in Wisconsin” was lower than for the economic issues, with 27% saying they were very concerned, 34% somewhat concerned, 21% not too concerned, and 18% not at all concerned.

Concern about the coronavirus pandemic was asked concerning “the United States” rather than “here in Wisconsin” in earlier surveys. That previous trend is shown in Table 21.

Table 21: Concern over coronavirus in United States trend, March 2020-October 2021

Poll dates Very concerned Somewhat concerned Not very concerned Not concerned at all Don’t know Refused
Mar. 24-29, 2020 68 25 5 2 0 0
May 3-7, 2020 50 31 12 7 0 0
Oct. 26-31, 2021 40 34 14 11 1 0

The decision to close businesses and schools in 2020 due to the coronavirus is seen as an appropriate response by 61% but as an overreaction by 35%. The initial reaction was overwhelming support, which has declined over time, as shown in Table 22.

Table 22: View of closing schools and businesses due to coronavirus trend, March 2020-February 2022

Poll dates Appropriate response Overreaction Don’t know Refused
Mar. 24-29, 2020 86 10 3 0
May 3-7, 2020 69 26 4 1
June 14-18, 2020 72 25 3 0
Oct. 21-25, 2020 68 26 5 0
Aug. 3-8, 2021 62 35 2 1
Feb. 22-27, 2022 61 35 3 0

Fifty-three percent say they trust Evers as a source of information about the virus either “a great deal” or “a fair amount,” while 43% say they trust him not much or not at all. Thirty-one percent trust Johnson “a great deal” or “a fair amount” for coronavirus information, with 61% saying they trust him “not much” or “not at all.” The full set of response options for October 2021 and February 2022 is shown in Table 23 for Evers and Table 24 for Johnson.

Table 23: Trust Evers for coronavirus information trend, October 2021-February 2022

Poll dates A great deal A fair amount Not much Not at all Don’t Know Refused
Oct. 26-31, 2021 24 29 18 27 3 0
Feb. 22-27, 2022 26 27 17 26 4 1

Table 24: Trust Johnson for coronavirus information trend, October 2021-February 2022

Poll dates A great deal A fair amount Not much Not at all Don’t Know Refused
Oct. 26-31, 2021 13 26 16 38 7 0
Feb. 22-27, 2022 13 18 17 44 8 0

Education issues

The question of who should have the biggest role in determining public school curriculum produces varied answers, with 35% saying parents, 33% saying teachers, 13% saying school boards, and 9% saying superintendents and principals. Five percent say state legislators should have the major role in curriculum.

On this issue, there is a divide along party lines, with Republicans and independents giving parents the larger role and Democrats assigning it to teachers, as shown in Table 25.

Table 25: Who should play biggest role in school curriculum, by party, February 2022

Party ID Teachers School Boards Parents Superintendents and principals State legislators Don’t know Refused
Republican 17 11 56 5 6 4 0
Independent 29 7 43 8 4 8 1
Democrat 53 16 9 14 5 4 0

A policy of “allowing all students statewide to use publicly funded vouchers to attend private or religious schools” is supported by 59% and opposed by 37%. When last asked in August 2020, the question was worded as to whether a respondent agreed or disagreed with a policy to “provide tax-funded vouchers to be used for private or religious schools.” At that time, 41% agreed with providing vouchers, and 49% disagreed with the policy.

A majority of respondents, 55%, say public schools are in worse shape than a few years ago, while 29% say they are in about the same shape, and 9% say they are better now. In August 2018, 44% said schools had gotten worse, 34% said they were about the same, and 15% said schools had gotten better.

Asked their opinion of the standards for education in Wisconsin schools, 47% of voters say the standards are lower than they should be, 31% say they are about where they should be, and 12% say they are higher than they should be. This is little changed from January 2014, when 47% said standards were too low, 32% said they were where they should be, and 15% said standards were too high.

Confidence in the 2020 election

Among all registered voters, 67% are very or somewhat confident the votes were accurately cast and counted in the 2020 election, while 31% are not too or not at all confident in the election accuracy. There are large partisan divisions shown in Table 26, but also some differences between Republicans and independents who lean Republican.

Table 26: Confidence in the accuracy of the 2020 election by party, February 2022

Party ID Confident Not confident DK/Ref
Republican 38 61 2
Lean Republican 49 51 0
Independent 55 35 10
Lean Democrat 94 4 2
Democrat 96 3 1

There has been a decline in skepticism among Republicans since August 2021, while independents who lean Republican have remained evenly split. Independents who do not lean to a party became more skeptical of the election between August and October and then changed little in February. Democrats and independents who lean Democratic are overwhelmingly confident in the election accuracy. Table 27 shows these trends.

Table 27: Confidence in the accuracy of the 2020 election, by party trend, August 2021-February 2022

Party ID Poll dates Confident Not confident DK/Ref
Republican Aug. 3-8, 2021 29 70 1
Republican Oct. 26-31, 2021 33 64 4
Republican Feb. 22-27, 2022 38 61 2
Lean Republican Aug. 3-8, 2021 49 49 2
Lean Republican Oct. 26-31, 2021 45 51 3
Lean Republican Feb. 22-27, 2022 49 51 0
Independent Aug. 3-8, 2021 79 15 6
Independent Oct. 26-31, 2021 56 38 6
Independent Feb. 22-27, 2022 55 35 10
Lean Democrat Aug. 3-8, 2021 96 4 0
Lean Democrat Oct. 26-31, 2021 94 5 0
Lean Democrat Feb. 22-27, 2022 94 4 2
Democrat Aug. 3-8, 2021 97 3 0
Democrat Oct. 26-31, 2021 99 1 0
Democrat Feb. 22-27, 2022 96 3 1

Marijuana legalization

Support for legalization of marijuana has grown since the question was first asked in 2013, with 61% in favor of legalization and 31% opposed now. The trend is shown in Table 28.

Table 28: Legalization of marijuana trend, October 2013-February 2022

Poll dates Yes, legal No, illegal Don’t Know Refused
Oct. 21-24, 2013 50 45 5 1
Mar. 20-23, 2014 42 52 6 0
Sept. 11-14, 2014 46 51 2 0
Jan. 16-20, 2019 59 35 7 0
April 3-7, 2019 59 36 4 1
Feb. 22-27, 2022 61 31 7 0

Support for legalization of marijuana has grown in each partisan group since 2013, with a slim majority of Republicans now supporting legalization, as shown in Table 29.

Table 29: Legalization of marijuana, by party identification trend, October 2013-February 2022

Party ID Poll dates Yes, legal No, illegal Don’t Know Refused
Republican Oct. 21-24, 2013 43 51 5 1
Republican Mar. 20-23, 2014 29 66 5 0
Republican Sept. 11-14, 2014 32 65 2 0
Republican Jan. 16-20, 2019 42 52 5 0
Republican April 3-7, 2019 41 56 3 0
Republican Feb. 22-27, 2022 51 42 7 0
Independent Oct. 21-24, 2013 49 51 0 0
Independent Mar. 20-23, 2014 38 53 9 1
Independent Sept. 11-14, 2014 45 53 1 1
Independent Jan. 16-20, 2019 68 28 3 0
Independent April 3-7, 2019 64 28 4 4
Independent Feb. 22-27, 2022 60 28 11 1
Democrat Oct. 21-24, 2013 53 41 5 1
Democrat Mar. 20-23, 2014 55 39 5 1
Democrat Sept. 11-14, 2014 61 37 3 0
Democrat Jan. 16-20, 2019 72 19 8 1
Democrat April 3-7, 2019 76 17 6 0
Democrat Feb. 22-27, 2022 75 19 5 1

About the Marquette Law School Poll

The Marquette Law School Poll is the most extensive statewide polling project in Wisconsin history. This survey interviewed 802 registered Wisconsin voters by landline or cell phone Feb. 22-27, 2022. The margin of error is +/-3.8 percentage points for the full sample.

Primary-vote choices have a sample size of 363 for the Republican primary and 354 for the Democratic primary, with margins of error of +/-5.8 and +/-5.7 for the Republican and Democratic primaries respectively. Republican primary voters include Republicans and independents who lean Republican plus independents who do not lean to either party but who say they will vote in the Republican primary; similarly for “Democratic primary voters.”

Some issue items were asked of half the sample. Those on Form A were asked of 400 and have a margin of error of +/-5.5 percentage points. Form B items were asked of 402 and have a margin of error of +/-5.4 percentage points.

Items asked of half-samples included on Form A concern for inflation, unemployment, illegal immigration, and coronavirus, plus opinion of school and business closures in 2020. Form B items included marijuana legalization, school curriculum, vouchers, whether schools had gotten better or worse, and whether school standards are too high or not high enough.

Favorability to some primary candidates was also asked of half the sample. These candidates were Battino, Olikara, Murphy, Lee, Lewis, Peckarsky, Rumbaugh and Williams. These items have a sample size of 400 or 402 cases and a margin of error of +/-5.5 percentage points.

The partisan makeup of the sample, including those who lean to a party, is 44% Republican, 43% Democratic, and 13% independent. The partisan makeup of the sample, excluding those who lean to a party, is 27% Republican, 25% Democratic, and 47% independent.

Since January 2020, the long-term partisan balance, including those who lean to a party, in the Marquette poll has been 45% Republican and 44 % Democratic, with 9% independent. Partisanship exuding those who lean has been 29% 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.

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