Las Vegas Review-Journal

Gov. Steve Sisolak got a favorable rating from just over half of respondent­s in a poll.

60% lauded governor’s pandemic response

- By Bill Dentzer Review-journal Capital Bureau

CARSON CITY — Gov. Steve Sisolak got a favorable rating from just over half of respondent­s in a new poll of Nevada voters, with better marks for his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and the state’s economy and slightly lower marks on the topic of race relations.

The governor’s approval rating broke roughly even on the issue of immigratio­n — not a state issue in terms of policymaki­ng — and gun policy, according to a poll conducted and paid for by Phoenixbas­ed OH Predictive Insights.

Sisolak earned overall favorable marks from 52 percent of poll respondent­s, with 20 percent giving him very favorable ratings and 39 percent overall giving him unfavorabl­e marks. Twenty-two rated his performanc­e as very unfavorabl­e.

The numbers were consistent across regions, age and race/ ethnicity but predictabl­y diverged widely by party affiliatio­n: 77 percent of Democrats rated Sisolak favorably compared to 30 percent of Republican­s and 46 percent of independen­ts.

Still, the pollster saw the results as good news for the first-term Democrat.

“For a Democrat in a perennial swing state that hadn’t elected a Democratic governor in the 24 years before him, Steve Sisolak is doing very well,” Mike Noble, the pollster’s chief of research, said in a statement. “His next challenge will be holding onto his high rating for the next 15 months until Election Day.”

The online opt-in survey of

783 Nevada registered voters was conducted July 6-11 and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points. The

website Fivethirty­eight gives the nonpartisa­n market research and public opinion firm a B/C rating whose polls skew slightly Republican.

On specific issues, 60 percent of respondent­s lauded Sisolak’s handling of the pandemic, including 77 percent of Democrats, 61 percent of Independen­ts and 38 percent of Republican­s. Those who said they were “extremely” or “moderately” concerned about the virus gave him a higher rating than those who were less concerned.

Voters also approved of the governor’s handling of the

economy, though by a lesser margin, with 53 percent approving and 38 percent disapprovi­ng.

The approval rate was the same among voters who cited jobs and the economy as the biggest issues facing Nevada, though that group’s disapprova­l rate was slightly higher, at 42 percent.

The governor’s approval ratings on race relations and gun policy were lower but still in the plus column. Nearly half of voters — 46 percent — approved his handling of race relations, compared to 33 percent who disapprove­d, and 41 percent approved his handling of gun policy, while 38 percent disapprove­d.

His wobbliest numbers appeared regarding immigratio­n policy. The approve/disapprove breakdown was statistica­lly equal, 41 percent to 40 percent, but with a stark partisan split: Republican­s disapprove­d of the governor’s immigratio­n stance by more than 2-1 while Democrats backed it by the same margin. Independen­ts split roughly even.

The sample was weighted to reflect the state’s actual registered voter population by gender, region, age, party affiliatio­n, ethnicity and education, based on data from the secretary of state’s office and most recent Census data.

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