The Record (Troy, NY)

Majority of voters say Cuomo should not resign

- Staff report newsroom@troyrecord.com newsroom@saratogian.com

LOUDONVILL­E, N.Y. » Voters say 50-35 percent that Gov. Andrew Cuomo should not immediatel­y resign. By 48-34 percent, they say he can continue to effectivel­y do his job as governor. One-third of voters say that Cuomo has committed sexual harassment, one-quarter say he has not, and a plurality are unsure.

Voters are satisfied with the way Cuomo has addressed the allegation­s, 57-32 percent, according to a new Siena College Poll of New York State voters, conducted March 8-12, released Monday.

The poll however was conducted prior to multiple calls for Cuomo’s resignatio­n on Friday, March 12, which included Sen. Chuck Schumer, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, and a large swath of New York’s Democratic Congressio­nal delegation.

Additional­ly, in the poll, voters approve of Cuomo’s handling of the pandemic, 60-33 percent, virtually unchanged from 61-34 percent last month. Voters give Cuomo positive grades on four specifics related to the pandemic – communicat­ing, providing accurate informatio­n, reopening plans and managing the vaccine rollout – however when it comes to making COVID-related nursing home death data public, voters give Cuomo a negative grade, 27-66 percent.

“While many elected officials – Democrats and Republican­s alike – have called for Cuomo’s resignatio­n, by a 50-35 percent margin, the voters of New York say Cuomo should not immediatel­y resign. Nearly two-thirds of Republican­s say Cuomo should resign, however, 61 percent of Democrats and 46 percent of independen­ts, a plurality, say he should not,” Siena College pollster Steven Greenberg stated.

“A majority of New York City voters and a plurality of voters from both upstate and the downstate suburbs say he should not resign. Similarly, voters say despite the ongoing investigat­ions, Cuomo can continue to effectivel­y do his

job as governor, 48-34 percent,” Greenberg continued.

“A strong majority of Democrats and a plurality of independen­ts say he can govern effectivel­y, while two-thirds of Republican­s disagree. Voters outside of New York City are closely divided, however, a strong majority of New York City voters say he can effectivel­y do his job,” Greenberg noted.

“While more voters, 35 percent, say Cuomo has committed sexual harassment than those who say he has not committed sexual harassment, 24 percent, the plurality of voters, 41 percent, are undecided,” Greenberg remarked.

“Cuomo has offered an apology and said his office will cooperate with the independen­t investigat­ion. By a 57-32 percent margin, voters say they are satisfied with the way Cuomo has addressed the allegation­s against him,” Greenberg explained.

“Two-thirds of Democrats are satisfied, as are 56 percent of independen­ts; 57 percent of Republican­s are not satisfied with the way Cuomo has addressed the allegation­s. Fifty-four percent of men and 59 percent of women say they are satisfied,” Greenberg noted.

Cuomo has a 43-45 percent favorabili­ty rating, down significan­tly from 56-39 percent in February. His job performanc­e rating is 46-52 percent, down from 51-47 percent last month. Currently, 34 percent of voters say they are prepared to re-elect Cuomo if he runs for re-election in 2022 and 52 percent say they would ‘prefer someone else,’ down significan­tly from 46-45 percent in February.

“Cuomo’s standing with voters has clearly fallen in the last month. His favorabili­ty rating and his reelect number are both down net 19 points, while his job performanc­e rating is down net 10 points,” Greenberg said.

“Cuomo’s drop in all three ratings is largely the result of Democrats. Among Democrats alone, his favorabili­ty rating dropped net 31 points and his re-elect dropped net 33 points. In fact, only 46 percent of Democrats now want to reelect Cuomo, compared to 40 percent who want someone else, down from 65-26 percent last month,” Greenberg continued.

“Voters appear to be able to compartmen­talize how they feel about Cuomo. While their views on him generally – favorabili­ty, job performanc­e, re-elect – took a significan­t hit this month, voters’ views on Cuomo’s handling of the pandemic remain largely positive, except for his handling of nursing home death data,” Greenberg noted.

“Two-thirds of New Yorkers, including 56 percent of Democrats, give him a negative grade for making public all data about COVIDrelat­ed deaths of nursing home patients,” Greenberg explained.

Greenberg also detailed polling data on the recently passed American Rescue Plan.

“The massive $1.9 trillion COVID relief plan passed by Congress and signed by President Biden enjoys overwhelmi­ng support from New Yorkers. Overall, 74 percent support the COVID relief plan, compared to only 21 percent who oppose it. It has support from 91 percent of Democrats and 67 percent of independen­ts, while Republican­s are evenly divided, 48-48 percent,” Greenberg said.

“The ‘weakest’ support geographic­ally comes from upstate voters, who support it two-to-one, 62-31 percent,” Greenberg noted.

Biden has a 64-30 percent favorabili­ty rating, little changed from 65-29 percent in February. He is viewed favorably by 89 percent

of Democrats and 57 percent of independen­ts, while 72 percent of Republican­s view him unfavorabl­y. His job performanc­e rating is 54 41 percent, down slightly from 55-38 percent last month.

“Less than two months on the job, Biden – like his first major legislativ­e victory, the COVID relief plan – enjoys strong support from New Yorkers – well, at least from Democrats and independen­ts,” Greenberg said.

“At this point in his presidency, Donald Trump had a 33-63 percent favorabili­ty rating, not very different from his current 31-66 percent favorabili­ty rating,” Greenberg added.

The poll also touched on ratings for other officials and issues affecting New York State:

• Attorney General Letitia James has a 40-14 percent favorabili­ty rating, up from 36-17 percent last month, her highest-ever favorabili­ty rating.

• Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul has a 23-14 percent favorabili­ty rating (64 percent have never heard of her or don’t know enough to have an opinion), the first time Siena has polled her in a statewide poll.

• New Yorkers are much more optimistic about the pandemic. Currently, 65 percent think the worst of the pandemic is over, compared to 23 percent who say the worst is still to come. Last month it was 46-36 percent.

• Thirty-six percent of voters say they have gotten vaccinated, another 40 percent say they plan to, and 21 percent who do not plan to get the vaccine, down from 25 percent in January and 22 percent last month.

• Support remains strong for legalizing the recreation­al use of marijuana in New York. Support is currently 59-33 percent, down a little from 63-29 percent last month. It has more than 60 percent support from Democrats and Independen­ts, and is supported by Republican­s, barely, 5148 percent.

• Voters continue to say New York state (48-38 percent) and the United States (50-41 percent) are headed in the right direction and not on the wrong track. Both are little changed from last month.

 ?? HOGP ?? In this image taken from video from the Office of the NY Governor, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks during a news conference, Wednesday, March 3, 2021, in Albany, N.Y.
HOGP In this image taken from video from the Office of the NY Governor, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks during a news conference, Wednesday, March 3, 2021, in Albany, N.Y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States