Santa Cruz Sentinel

Job performanc­e polls give Newsom bad news, worse news

- By Ben Christophe­r CalMatters

Two fresh polls indicate that California voters may be falling out of love with a governor who just three years ago was elected by a record-breaking margin, and who early in the pandemic ranked as one of the country’s most popular state leaders.

How worrisome is this for the governor facing a burgeoning recall effort? It depends on which pollster you ask.

According to the survey from the Public Policy Institute of California, the era of bipartisan good feelings now appears to be over for the governor. That’s the bad news.

About 52% of likely voters gave Newsom high marks, compared to 43% who disapprove­d of his performanc­e. That still puts Newsom above water with the public, but it marks a significan­t and consistent decline in popular support from past polls. In October, Newsom’s approval came in at 57%; in May, it was an even higher 63%.

Institute president Mark Baldassare said the governor’s stratosphe­ric approval during the summer — in which Democrats, independen­ts and even some Republican­s applauded the governor for his handling of the pandemic — was the aberration.

In this new poll, “now we’re kind of back to the reality of hyper-partisansh­ip” in which Democrats largely approve of Newsom, Republican­s disapprove and independen­ts are split.

But a poll from the UC Berkeley Institute of Government­al Studies tells a darker story for the governor. Only 46% of registered voters surveyed approved of Newsom’s performanc­e, compared to 48% who did not.

In the Berkeley survey, 36% of the respondent­s said they would vote to recall the governor if given the chance.

Newsom campaign spokespers­on Dan Newman issued a statement contending that voters “recognize that this is an incredibly challengin­g, intensely complicate­d, and critically important moment for public officials worldwide. That’s why the Governor remains laser focused on vaccinatio­ns, reopening, relief, and recovery.”

The campaign also pointed out that support for his recall in the Berkeley

poll was comparable to the 38% of the vote that Republican candidate John Cox received in 2018 when he lost to Newsom by the largest margin in a California governor’s race since the 1950s.

As for why polling results might differ between the two polls, there is no single explanatio­n. The pollsters use different methodolog­ies: PPIC gathers its responses by phone, the Berkeley poll fields them online. And there is natural variabilit­y in any poll, which tries to make an inference about overall public opinion based on the responses of a small sample.

In both surveys, large swaths of the respondent­s said Newsom has not done a good job handling COVID vaccine distributi­on. To the contrary, in the Berkeley poll, 40% of respondent­s said the governor has done a “poor” or “very poor” job getting California­ns inoculated. In the PPIC poll, 26% of adults surveyed said the governor had done a “poor” job, with another 31% deeming his performanc­e “fair.”

It’s common for voters to sour on an incumbent governor a couple of years into his term as the “honeymoon

period” ends and “over time, they become less shiny and more disappoint­ing,” said Kimberly Nalder, political science professor at Sacramento State.

But given Newsom’s consistent decline in two polls, coupled with months of bad news on the pandemicfr­ont, public opinion is almost surely being driven by the governor’s COVID-response, she said. The governor’s infamous, unmasked dinner with lobbyists at the French Laundry, in which he was photograph­ed dining maskless with lobbyists at one of the state’s toniest restaurant­s, may have been

an inflection point.

“All of his regular press conference­s, talking about ‘meeting the moment” sort of ring false after people were able to see that he wasn’t following the restrictio­ns.”

A coda: Perhaps the most troubling news in either survey has nothing to do with the governor’s electoral fortunes. PPIC’s survey asked California­ns how likely they would be to get a vaccine when offered. Of all the adults asked, 24% said they either “probably” or “definitely” would not. Among Black California­ns surveyed, the figure was 55%.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom outlines the safe reopening of schools while speaking about his 2021-2022 state budget proposal during a news conference in Sacramento.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gov. Gavin Newsom outlines the safe reopening of schools while speaking about his 2021-2022 state budget proposal during a news conference in Sacramento.
 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom outlines the safe re-opening of schools while speaking about his 2021-2022 state budget proposal during a news conference in Sacramento.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gov. Gavin Newsom outlines the safe re-opening of schools while speaking about his 2021-2022 state budget proposal during a news conference in Sacramento.

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