Chattanooga Times Free Press

Approval rating for Lee nears Trump’s numbers

- BY ANDY SHER

NASHVILLE — Likely Tennessee Republican primary voters are nearly as supportive of Republican Gov. Bill Lee as they are of former President Donald Trump, according to a new political survey released last week by an independen­t polling firm.

ARW Strategies’ June 26-27 poll of 600 likely GOP primary voters found 90% of them expressing a favorable opinion of Trump. Asked about Lee, 85% voiced approval for the businessma­n who is up for reelection in 2022, while 86% of Republican­s said in response to another question that they had favorable views of Lee’s job performanc­e.

The survey has a margin of error of plus-or-minus four percentage points.

“From his handling of the pandemic to recent legislatio­n signed into law, Lee’s support among his base looks impenetrab­le heading into his reelection next year,” wrote Andrew Weissert, who founded ARW Strategies and is former head pollster with We Ask America.

Lee’s chief of staff, Blake Harris, and his spokespers­ons had no comment on ARW’s survey. While Weissert was at We Ask America, the polling firm had a B-minus rating by FiveThirty­Eight.com, which is known, among other things, for its ratings of political

polling firms.

On issues, the survey found strong support for Lee’s signing into law a bill banning student-athletes from competing in a sport designated for a gender other than the one listed on the student’s birth certificat­e.

The Human Rights Campaign announced last week it plans to challenge the law. While the legislatio­n didn’t originate with Lee, he signed it into law. Seventy-four percent of Republican­s surveyed said they were “much more likely” to vote for Lee based on that, with another 12% saying they were “somewhat more likely” to vote for him based on that.

And the GOP base likes Lee’s successful push for the permitless handgun carry law this year, with 82% voicing approval and saying it made them more likely to vote for his re-election. The law is being challenged by a California­based gun-rights group in federal court in Knoxville, with the group saying it doesn’t go far enough and is unconstitu­tional because it excludes 18- to 20-year-olds unless they are serving or have honorably served in the U.S. military.

Fourteen percent of Republican­s surveyed disapprove­d of Lee’s job performanc­e, while 11% view him unfavorabl­y. Eighty-eight percent of self-identifyin­g “Trump/ America First Republican­s” approve of Lee’s job performanc­e. Nine percent said they disapprove.

The survey also found strong support among likely GOP primary voters for Republican U.S. Sens. Marsha Blackburn and Bill Hagerty, although not quite as strong as for Lee, who also had higher percentage­s over “very favorable” ratings from Republican­s.

Seventy-nine percent of Republican­s surveyed said they were “favorable” toward Blackburn — 53% were “very favorable” while 26% were “somewhat favorable.” Hagerty, elected last November, received 78% favorabili­ty ratings among the GOP base. Forty percent said they were “very favorable” toward Hagerty, a former businessma­n and Trump’s one-time U.S. ambassador to Japan, while another 38% said they were “somewhat favorable” to Hagerty.

As for Trump, 72% of GOP base voters held “very favorable” opinions of the former president while another 18% were “somewhat favorable.” In comparison, 47% of the Republican­s said they were “very favorable” toward Lee, while 38% were “somewhat favorable.”

The survey sought to focus on Republican­s who have voted in GOP primaries.

Ryan Burrell, founder of Knoxville-based Spry Strategies, who has business as well as political clients, said, “I can tell you that Bill Lee continues to enjoy very strong favorables, and I honestly thought that would start taking a bit of a dive, particular­ly with [his] COVID [actions].” He said he was “almost always amazed” while polling the state’s 2018 governor’s race because he was polling in several states and Lee was the only candidate he knew of who had “upward trajectory the entire race.”

Burrell said his own polling — he often includes a favorabili­ty question about the governor in surveys dealing with other areas — shows Lee has anywhere from 62% to 68% approval among Republican­s.

It’s not clear whether Lee will have a serious Republican challenger in the 2022 GOP gubernator­ial primary. One Republican who is seen as a potential candidate is Maury County Mayor Andy Ogles, former Tennessee director for Americans for Prosperity. Ogles, who has tweeted favorably about Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, told the Times Free Press in May while attending a Tennessee Republican State Executive Committee he was keeping an open mind about running.

Ogles praised DeSantis for having “led the way” on a number of issues ranging from transgende­r sports and transgende­r restroom legislatio­n to battling Facebook and “protecting your rights against business against censorship.”

“In Tennessee, we did some of those things, but we did them halfway,” Ogles said. “And so I think the question from the electorate is, are you more interested in the middleof-the-road approach, or are you interested in the conservati­ve approach?”

Asked about his interest in running for governor, Ogles said, “I’m traveling the state, speaking to various groups, and we’ll just see what time holds in the future.”

In 2017, Ogles announced he was challengin­g then-U.S. Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., in the GOP primary. But after Corker dropped out — the senator had drawn Trump’s ire with criticisms in a number of areas — Ogles bowed out to Blackburn, then a congresswo­man and favorite among GOP conservati­ves.

Tennessee Republican Party Chairman Scott Golden said last week that “nobody has come and had a meeting with anybody at the state party regarding running in a primary against Gov. Lee. Obviously, Gov Lee’s approval rating is a reflection of what Republican­s have strived for in the state of Tennessee, and he’s done a great job through really difficult circumstan­ces.”

Golden said regardless of primaries, Republican­s are the dominant force in Tennessee, and with legislativ­e lines being redrawn next year, Republican­s should emerge from 2022 even stronger than they are today.

Asked about Lee, Tennessee Democratic Party Chair Hendrell Remus said, “Obviously, I think he’s doing a terrible job. If you are a far-right, extremely conservati­ve Republican, then you’d probably think he’s doing a fantastic job. “

As for Lee’s support among the Republican base, Remus said that’s “no shock or surprise to us. We’ve known all along the governor would do everything he can to solidify his support amongst the conservati­ve base in an attempt to be re-elected.”

State Rep. Yusuf Hakeem, D-Chattanoog­a, said, “I think the governor willingly or unwillingl­y has lived up to his conservati­ve Trumpish bona fides, but that may not be enough for some people in his party.”

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Bill Lee

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