Chicago Sun-Times

J.B. Pritzker 8th most unpopular governor in the country, poll says

- BY TINA SFONDELES, POLITICAL REPORTER tsfondeles@suntimes.com | @TinaSfon

Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker may have legalized recreation­al marijuana and ushered in a massive capital plan in his first year, but a Morning Consult poll finds he’s the eighth most unpopular governor in the country.

While Pritzker’s approval rating has remained relatively steady, his disapprova­l rating has climbed, the poll found.

Earlier this year, a Morning Consult poll found his favorabili­ty at 44%, with the latest poll clocking him at 43%. His disapprova­l rating has grown from 35% earlier this year to 42%. Unsurprisi­ngly, the disapprova­l is coming from Republican­s, who watched the political newcomer rush in a bevy of progressiv­e measures, including his push for a graduated income tax question on the 2020 ballot. Of those polled, 14% said they were undecided.

With a massive budget and capital plan finalized — not to mention the legalizati­on of marijuana, gambling expansion and the strengthen­ing of the state’s abortion laws — the rookie governor notched big victories during his first go-around in Springfiel­d.

And while it was Pritzker who pushed many of these policies along, he was also operating with a Democratic supermajor­ity in both chambers — the very lawmakers who watched in horror as public universiti­es and social services became decimated amid a war with former Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner.

The poll measured the most popular and unpopular governors by total approval and total disapprova­l, with the net approval — approval minus disapprova­l — serving as the tiebreaker.

The most popular governor in the country, according to the poll, is Republican Massachuse­tts Gov. Charlie Baker. The rest of the popular list includes all Republican governors.

The most unpopular governor is Democratic Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo, with a 36% approval rating and a 56% disapprova­l rating, the poll found.

Morning Consult conducted 533,985 nationwide surveys with registered voters from July 1 through Sept. 30. The margin of error for Illinois was plus or minus 1%, and 21,533 registered Illinois voters were polled.

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