Albuquerque Journal

Half of city voters favor Keller’s job performanc­e

60% approval rating a year ago likely due to pandemic response

- Copyright © 2021 Albuquerqu­e Journal BY JESSICA DYER JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Slightly more Albuquerqu­e voters are willing to cast ballots for Tim Keller this fall than think he is doing a good job as mayor, according to a new Journal poll.

Although 53% of likely voters in the city say they have voted for Keller or will vote for him, his approval rating in the same poll is 50%.

Thirty-six percent of likely voters disapprove of the job he is doing, and 12% say they have mixed feelings.

Keller, who is now wrapping up his first term in office, has historical­ly enjoyed higher ratings; his job approval rating was 60% a year ago and 61% in 2018.

Brian Sanderoff of Research & Polling Inc. said there are likely several reasons for the decline, including crime. With months still to go in 2021, Albuquerqu­e already has broken its annual homicide record. Meanwhile, Keller’s mayoral opponents have spent months highlighti­ng the city’s ongoing crime challenges.

The pandemic may be a factor too. Surveys have shown most residents thought the city government did well responding to COVID-19, which could have contribute­d to Keller’s 60% rating a year ago but might not be a large considerat­ion in voters’ minds today.

Even beyond that, Sanderoff said, is the normal waning of support.

“It’s hard to maintain high approval ratings during a mayor’s term,” said Sanderoff, whose Albuquerqu­e-based firm conducted the poll.

Not surprising­ly, voters from the Democratic mayor’s own party perceive his job performanc­e better than Republican­s.

Among Democrats, Keller has a 72% approval rating and 14% disapprova­l rating. It is nearly the opposite with Republican­s — 18% approve, and 70% disapprove.

Just a year ago, 33% of Republican­s had given him a favorable review. Sanderoff attributes the falloff at least in part to Keller’s more conservati­ve mayoral challenger­s, Manuel Gonzales and Eddy Aragon, hammering the message that he’s not done well combating crime.

Independen­ts are split on Keller, with 40% approving and 41% disapprovi­ng.

In other demographi­c breakdowns, women are more likely to give him positive reviews, with 56% approving, compared with 44% of men.

Although 80% of survey respondent­s who said they were voting for Keller in the Nov. 2 election say they approve of how he’s doing as mayor, 12% say they have mixed feelings and 7% say they disapprove.

That is likely a statement on the overall mayoral field, Sanderoff said.

“They don’t like the alternativ­es,” he said.

The Journal Poll is based on a scientific, citywide sample of 536 likely regular local election voters, including those who voted in the 2017 and/ or 2019 local elections and a small sample of newly registered voters likely to vote in 2021.

The poll was conducted from Oct. 15 through Oct. 21. The voter sample has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.3 percentage points. The margin of error grows for subsamples.

All interviews were conducted by live, profession­al interviewe­rs, with multiple callbacks to households that did not initially answer the phone.

Both cellphone numbers (82%) and landlines (18%) were used.

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 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? Albuquerqu­e Mayor Tim Keller stands before the city government building at Civic Plaza. Mayor Keller enjoys strong approval ratings going into next month’s mayoral election with 50% approving of his job performanc­e.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL Albuquerqu­e Mayor Tim Keller stands before the city government building at Civic Plaza. Mayor Keller enjoys strong approval ratings going into next month’s mayoral election with 50% approving of his job performanc­e.

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