The Direction of the State and Favorability of Political Institutions
By Ken Warren, Ph.D., SLU/YouGov Poll Associate Director
We found in our February 2023 SLU/YouGov Poll that Missouri鈥檚 likely voters rated the job performance of their elected public officials quite positively compared to President Joe Biden, as discussed in another report. We found that Missouri likely voters think that things in Missouri are going quite well compared to what is happening nationally. When likely Missouri voters were asked whether they approve of the U.S. Congress鈥檚 job performance, 22% approved with only 2% saying they 鈥渟trongly approve鈥 with only another 20% 鈥渁pproving鈥. But when asked to rate the job performance of the Missouri legislature, 51% approved with 8% 鈥渟trongly approving鈥 and 43% 鈥渁pproving鈥. The Missouri legislature received a 29% better performance score from likely Missouri voters than the U.S. Congress.
However, Missouri鈥檚 likely voters did give the U.S. Supreme Court a fairly positive job performance score (48%) with 7% 鈥渟trongly approving鈥 and 41% 鈥渁pproving鈥. This is likely due to the fact that President Trump, still popular in Missouri, appointed three conservative justices to Supreme Court, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Barrett, allowing the Supreme Court to hand down court decisions that are acceptable to most Missourians. However, it would not be accurate to say that Missourians are pleased with the Supreme Court鈥檚 2022 decision, overturning Roe v. Wade. In our August 2022 poll, we found that even rather conservative Missouri voters were not on board with that decision. Only 47% of Missouri鈥檚 likely voters agreed with the decision with 31% 鈥渟trongly agreeing鈥 and 16% 鈥渁greeing鈥, while 50% disagreed with the decision (12% 鈥渄isagreeing鈥 with 38% 鈥渟trongly disagreeing鈥. Our recent poll鈥檚 crosstabs revealed predictable findings. We found that men (58%) were much more supportive of the Supreme Court鈥檚 performance than women (39%); Republicans were much more likely to approve of the Court鈥檚 performance than Democrats; 71% to 18% respectively. Rural voters approved of the Supreme Court鈥檚 performance more than metro voters with, for example, 68% approval in SE Missouri, but only 37% approving in the KC metro area.
Missouri likely voters are split over whether 鈥渢he State of Missouri is on the right track and headed in a good direction鈥 with 40% agreeing and 44% disagreeing. But only a small percentage, 16%, agree that the U.S government 鈥渋s on the right track and headed in a good direction鈥 with a whopping 73% saying they 鈥渄isagree鈥. Crosstabs disclosed that white Missouri likely voters (75%), Republicans (94%), those below a college degree (74%, some college, and 77%, high school degree), and those living in rural regions, are more apt to agree that the U.S. is not on the right track and not headed in a good direction. This is rather predictable since Missouri鈥檚 conservative red state politics are not in sync with the more liberal direction of national politics, reflected in the fact that Biden won the presidential election by 4.4% (by about seven million votes), yet lost in Missouri by a 鈥渂low-out鈥 margin, 15.4%, for a difference of 19.8%.