If the Republican Party Is Dying, Why Are Their Governors So Popular? – National Review

Then-Republican candidate for Governor Ron DeSantis holds a rally in Orlando, Fla., November 5, 2018. (Carlo Allegri/Reuters)

A new St. Leos poll in Florida shows Governor Ron DeSantis sporting an approval rating of 68 percent (with a disapproval of 20 percent). Whats most impressive about these numbers is that in every demographic that matters, DeSantis is polling above 50 percent with both sexes, Hispanic (67 percent approval) and black voters (63), and among both parties.

When it comes to governorships, Florida isnt an outlier. The last time the Morning Consult poll tabulated a list of the most popular governors, the top 14 and 18 of the top 20 were Republicans. These Republicans govern in states that have highly diverse electorates, from Alabama to Vermont.

Which is weird, because this very week, progressives at the New York Times and the Atlantic were assuring us that the GOP was so reviled nationally and its agenda so toxic to the average American that the party has been compelled to hide from democratic accountability.

Naturally, Charlie Baker cant support the same policies in Massachusetts that Mark Gordon can in Wyoming. And some of these governors have their agendas tempered by Democratic legislatures, while others do not. But, like DeSantis, all of them tend to govern with a conservative disposition, and most of them openly advocate a conservative agenda.

How many progressive governors do you see near the top of the list? Kate Brown of Oregon, perhaps the most progressive governor in the country, is also one of its least popular. Gavin Newsom, whos pushed a slate of left-wing policies, owns an approval rating in heavily liberal California thats on par with Donald Trumps national numbers. Rational, pragmatic, progressive J. B. Pritzkers polls are horrible. Andrew Cuomos numbers are brutal. The only Democrats in the top 20 are Steve Bullock and John Carney, two of the most moderate liberal governors in the country.

Nothing is static in politics, and there are an array of factors that drive a politicians approval. (Heres a deeper dive by John McCormack on why Republicans are succeeding.) But its a bit difficult to ignore the striking skew of this list.

It seems to me that voters have a far more personal, less ideological stake in their governors than they do in the politicians they send to Washington as proxies in broader philosophical battles. Congress, thankfully, does little real policy work. Governors are far more likely to be judged on nuts-and-bolts governance, stability, and competence. In this regard, its pretty clear that Republicans are figuring out ways to stay relevant and popular in lots of areas of the country. Its also pretty clear that voters are able to compartmentalize their local and national votes. Pundits who treat Trumps approval rating as the ultimate indicator of the GOPs political fortunes are doing their readers a disservice.

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If the Republican Party Is Dying, Why Are Their Governors So Popular? - National Review

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