Conducted by The Institute for Policy and Opinion Research
New Administration in Virginia, Youngkin approval at 50 percent, Partisan divide remains among Virginians
The Institute for Policy and Opinion Research (IPOR) at Roanoke College interviewed 605 adult residents of Virginia between Feb. 7 and Feb. 16, 2022, in a survey addressing topics such as the recent executive actions by Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, feelings about personal freedom versus health and safety, COVID vaccination, and general feelings about current and former elected officials. The survey has a margin of error of 4.8 percent.
Approvals, Favorable/Unfavorable, Direction of VA, Country
Almost two months into his term as governor of Virginia, Glenn Youngkin registers a 50 percent approval rating while 41 percent disapprove. While the percentage of Virginians that disapprove of the way he is handling his job is larger than disapprovals for former Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (38 percent disapprove in August 2021), Youngkin’s approval rating hovers near Northam’s approval ratings for 2021 (52 percent in August, 47 percent in May, 49 percent in February).
Approval of President Joe Biden’s job is at a low, 41 percent with 53 percent disapproving, since he took office, according to the Roanoke College Poll. Disapproval of the way the U.S. Congress is handling its job remains high, at 72 percent with only 21 percent approving. That for the Virginia General Assembly is 44 percent approving, with 37 percent disapproving, similar to results when last asked in August of 2021.
About 46 percent of Virginians have a favorable view of Gov. Youngkin, with 42 percent having an unfavorable view. Lt. Gov. Winsome Sears holds a 30 percent favorable and 33 percent unfavorable rating, with 35 percent of respondents not knowing enough about her to have formed an opinion. Attorney General Jason Miyares has a 24 percent favorable and 34 percent unfavorable rating, with 41 percent of respondents not being able to form an opinion at the current time. Former Gov. Northam holds a 41 percent/44 percent favorable/unfavorable rating (down from 54 percent/39 percent in September) while President Biden’s ratings are 43 percent favorable and 52 percent unfavorable. This marks the first time in the Roanoke College Poll where a majority of Virginians have an unfavorable view of Biden. Former President Donald Trump has a 37 percent favorable and 56 percent unfavorable rating among Virginians, virtually unchanged since October.
When asked about the country, 29 percent of Virginians say that things are going in the right direction while 67 percent say that things have gotten off on the wrong track, which compares similarly to Virginians’ viewpoint in November. Regarding the Commonwealth itself, Virginians are split, with 47 percent saying things are going in the right direction and 47 percent saying things have gotten off on the wrong track.
Masks, Vaccination Requirements, Personal Freedom, Executive Orders
On the day of his inauguration, Gov. Youngkin’s second executive order aimed to place the decision about mask-wearing in schools in the hands of students’ parents. Roanoke College Poll found that 46 percent of Virginians strongly or somewhat agree with this executive order while 52 percent disagree. Approval is high (82 percent) among Republicans but lower among Democrats (21 percent) and Independents (41 percent).
We asked respondents whether school districts or the Commonwealth should be setting mask mandates. About 56 percent of Virginians say that “local school districts should set mask requirements for themselves” as opposed to 37 percent saying “Gov. Youngkin and the state government should set mask requirements for local school districts.” Preference for local school districts setting mandates was among the lowest partisan divide in our poll, with 45 percent of Republicans and 61 percent of Democrats preferring school district choice.
The governor’s second executive directive, also issued on Inauguration Day, removed the vaccine mandate for all state employees. Virginians were divided on the issue, with 51 percent strongly or somewhat agreeing and 46 percent strongly or somewhat disagreeing. Among Republicans, 84 percent had some degree of agreement, while just 23 percent of Democrats did. Overall, just over half (51 percent) of Virginians approve of Gov. Youngkin’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic while 44 percent disapprove.
We asked respondents to place themselves on a scale with personal freedom on one side and health and safety on the other. About 38 percent of respondents expressed some degree of balance toward personal freedom while 37 percent balanced more toward health and safety. Roughly 22 percent placed themselves “solidly in the middle” between the two sides. The balance toward personal freedom is higher (62 percent) among Republicans when compared to Democrats (26 percent) and Independents (32 percent).
COVID Vaccination
The percentage of adult Virginians fully vaccinated against COVID-19 or awaiting their second dose remains near 77 percent, while just three percent say they plan to start vaccination soon, according to The Roanoke College Poll. These numbers remain unchanged from similar results in September (78 percent fully or partially vaccinated and two percent planning to start soon) when both polls’ margins of error are considered. The percentage of adults who state they do not plan to get vaccinated (18 percent now, 13 percent in November, and 11 percent in September) increased slightly.
Among those adults fully vaccinated, 61 percent have received a third dose or booster shot (an increase from 24 percent in November), another 23 percent plan to get another shot soon, and 16 percent do not plan to receive another dose (down from 22 percent in November).
Results regarding being fully vaccinated continue to differ greatly when political party is considered. Democrats report full or partial vaccination at 89 percent with just five percent not planning to get a shot; for Republicans, those numbers are 67 percent and 28 percent. Regarding booster shots, 89 percent of Democrats have or plan to get an additional dose of vaccine with only ten percent not planning to do so. Republicans have a slightly lower rate of booster dose interest (82 percent) and slightly increased rate of reporting no plans to receive an additional shot (18 percent). Unlike in November (interest 67 percent, no plans 37 percent), vaccinated Republicans now show similar interest to vaccinated Democrats in booster shots.
Analysis
“It is not a surprise at all that many issues and opinions across the Commonwealth continue to be affected by partisanship and that mask wearing, vaccination, and other topics divide along party lines,” says Dr. David Taylor, director of IPOR. “Opinions regarding elected officials are also not a surprise, as a drop in President Biden’s job approval and favorability rating mirrors ratings at the national level, and relative newcomers to statewide prominence, Lt. Gov. Sears and Attorney General Miyares, have yet to reach a good proportion of Virginians.”
“There is some worry among Virginians about the direction of the Commonwealth, as fewer residents feel that our state is heading in the right direction,” Taylor said. “While Youngkin maintains a 50 percent job approval rating and 51 percent approval of his pandemic handling, a slight majority disapproves of his executive actions that removed mask mandates in schools. By an almost 20-point margin, Virginians believe the authority to set mask mandates should be left with the school districts themselves and not with the Governor’s office or state. In most cases, opinions of Virginians are more extreme when combined with a respondent’s political party, but even almost a majority (45 percent) of Republicans favor local school districts setting policy.”
“The story about vaccination for COVID-19 remains mostly unchanged since we last reported in November,” Taylor said. “In the area of good news for the Virginia Department of Health and efforts to reach Virginians about booster shots, about 61 percent of fully vaccinated residents have already gotten or have scheduled their additional dose, while another 23 percent are planning to do so, results that are relatively similar even when controlling for political party.”
“Personal freedom versus health and safety is something that we all think about more these days, and Virginians appear almost equally split in terms of those who prefer personal freedom and those who prefer health and safety, with a healthy 22 percent of respondents saying they’re ‘solidly in the middle.’”
Methodology
Interviewing for The Roanoke College Poll was conducted by The Institute for Policy and Opinion Research at Roanoke College in Salem, Virginia, between Feb. 7 and Feb. 16, 2022. A total of 605 residents of Virginia, 18 or older, were included in this study. Telephone interviews, conducted in English, comprised 403 of the respondents, and 202 responses were drawn from a proprietary online panel of Virginians. The landline sample consisted of random-digit numbers generated in proportion to the Virginia population so that all residential telephone numbers, including unlisted numbers, had a known chance of inclusion. Cellphone samples were purchased from Marketing Systems Group and comprised 55 percent of the completed telephone interviews. Lucid, LLC, facilitated the online panel.
Questions answered by the entire sample of 605 respondents are subject to an error margin of plus or minus approximately 4.8 percent at the 95 percent level of confidence. This means that in 95 out of 100 samples such as the one used here, the results obtained should be no more than 4.8 percentage points above or below the figure that would be obtained by interviewing all Virginia adults who have a home telephone or a cellphone. Where the results of subgroups are reported, the margin of error is higher.
Quotas were used to ensure that different regions of the Commonwealth were proportionately represented. The data were statistically weighted for gender, race, and age, and done to match Virginia census data. The design effect was 1.464; the reported margin of error above reflects this design effect.
The Institute follows the American Association for Public Opinion Research’s Code of Professional Ethics and Practices and is a charter member of that association’s Transparency Initiative.