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The top issue on most Marylanders’ minds as the state continues to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2022 election nears is the economy and jobs, according to a new poll.
About 28% of voters in a said the economy was the issue that would be most important to them as they decide which governor candidate to vote for in 2022.
Other top issues cited were:
- Health care (14%)
- Racial and social justice issues (13%)
- Taxes (12%)
Education and the environment were each cited as the top priority by 8% of those polled.
The poll of 631 Maryland voters was conducted from Oct. 14 to 20, and has a margin of error of 3.9 points.
Broken down by party, the economy was the top-cited issue by Republicans (46%) and unaffiliated voters (36%).
The top issue identified by Democrats, who were more evenly split across several topics, was racial and social justice (20%).
Just 3% of Republicans cited racial and social justice as their top concern. Twenty-two percent of Black voters did.
Voters in the poll were also given a choice of generic general election matchups and asked which candidate they would prefer:
In a matchup between a Republican like Larry Hogan or a progressive Democrat:
- 55 percent would likely prefer a Republican like Larry Hogan
- 38 percent would likely prefer a progressive Democrat.
Given a choice between a Republican like Donald Trump or a progressive Democrat:
- 31 percent would likely prefer a Republican like Donald Trump
- 62 percent would likely prefer a progressive Democrat.
If the general election candidates were a Republican like Larry Hogan or a moderate Democrat:
- 49 percent would likely prefer a Republican like Larry Hogan
- 44 percent would likely prefer a moderate Democrat.
And in a race between a Republican like Donald Trump or a moderate Democrat:
- 29 percent would likely prefer a Republican like Donald Trump
- 69 percent would likely prefer a moderate Democrat.
Mileah Kromer, director of Goucher College’s Sarah T. Hughes Center for Politics, which conducted the poll, said the results of the hypothetical matchups suggest that a Trumpian candidate would face a significant electoral disadvantage against either a moderate or progressive Democrat. The former president never registered approval rating among Marylanders above the low-30s.
“The clearest path to holding the governorship for Maryland Republicans is by nominating a candidate who voters view as similar to Larry Hogan,” Kromer said in a memo about the poll results. “On the Democratic side, it appears that a moderate candidate is electorally stronger than a progressive among registered voters.”
She included a caveat: “…We’re a full year out from the election. Preferences can easily change once voters get to know the candidates as individuals.”
dgaines@marylandmatters.org