Gubernatorial Candidate “Who?” New Jersey Voters Are Largely Unaware of Governor Hopefuls One Year Out

The New Jersey Statehouse and Capitol Building In Trenton

With one election over and another a year away here in the Garden State, there are a number of political figures vying for the governorship in 2025. The problem is, New Jersey voters don’t know who they are, according to the latest Rutgers-Eagleton Poll.

“Given that next year’s gubernatorial has no incumbent and no clear front-runners yet, large majorities of voters do not know or have opinions on any of the declared or potential candidates,” said Ashley Koning, an assistant research professor and director of the Eagleton Center for Public Interest Polling (ECPIP) at Rutgers University-New Brunswick. “On either side of the aisle, no candidate is viewed favorably by more than one in five voters, and at least half of voters do not take sides on any of the candidates we asked.”

On the Democratic side, 16% percent view Newark Mayor Ras Baraka favorably, 11% unfavorably, and 21% have no opinion; 51% don’t know who he is. Twelve percent of voters view state Senate President Steve Sweeney favorably, 19% unfavorably, 25% have no opinion and 44% don’t know who he is.

Nine percent of voters are favorable toward Jersey City Mayor Steve Fulop, 9% are unfavorable, 22% have no opinion and 60% don’t know who he is. Seven percent view Sean Spiller, president of the New Jersey Education Association, favorably, another 7% unfavorably, and 21% have no opinion; 65% don’t know who he is.

Rumored candidate U.S. Rep. Mikie Sherrill receives the most favorable ratings: 19% view her favorably, 8% unfavorably and 20% have no opinion; 53% don’t know who she is. U.S. Rep. Josh Gottheimer, also a rumored candidate, receives 15% favorable, 8% unfavorable and 21% have no opinion; 56% don’t know who he is.

It’s a very similar picture on the Republican side: Candidates lack awareness from a majority of voters, including the 2021 Republican gubernatorial nominee, and no candidate is viewed favorably by more than 1 in 5 voters.

Former assemblyman and 2021 Republican gubernatorial candidate Jack Ciattarelli receives the most favorable ratings: 20% of voters view him favorably, 16% unfavorably, 23% have no opinion and 41% don’t know him.

Nine percent view radio host Bill Spadea favorably, 12% unfavorably, 18% have no opinion and 60% don’t know who he is.

Seven percent give state Sen. Jon Bramnick a favorable rating, 5% unfavorable and 20% have no opinion; 68% don’t know who he is.

“The field vying to succeed Gov. Murphy is already large and likely to grow even more,” said Kristoffer Shields, director of the Center for the American Governor at Rutgers University-New Brunswick. “Name recognition will therefore be crucially important. As the number of candidates rises, so does the risk of getting lost in the sea of names. Candidates will need to act quickly to introduce themselves to voters and separate themselves from the pack as the June primaries will be here before we know it.”

When it comes to the current governor, more than half of voters (55%) approve of the way Gov. Phil Murphy is handling his job, while 36% disapprove. The governor garners similar numbers on favorability – 50% favorable versus 34% unfavorable. Murphy’s approval haven’t significantly changed from where they were about a year ago, when he had 56% approval among registered voters and 46% favorability 46% among registered voters.

Partisan patterns hold steady on the governor’s approval and favorability, too. Democrats are much more likely to approve of (82%) and give favorable ratings to Murphy (76%), independents are split on both approval (45% approve versus 42% disapprove) and favorability (37% favorable versus 39% unfavorable), and Republicans largely disapprove of Murphy (68%) and give him unfavorable ratings (66%).

New Jersey voters are split on their outlook of the state: 45% say it is “currently going in the right direction,” while 46% say it has “gone off on the wrong track;” 9% are unsure.

Typical partisan patterns hold consistent. While most Democrats say the state is headed in the right direction (72%), more than half of independents (53%) and 8 in 10 Republicans (80%) say it has gone off on the wrong track.

“Voters are a bit more mixed about the direction of the state than they were a little less than a year ago,” said Jessica Roman, director of data management and analysis at ECPIP. “Last December, voters were more negative than positive – 48% ‘wrong track’ to 43% ‘right direction’ – about New Jersey. Even though this margin has narrowed, however, there really hasn’t been a significant shift in either direction on outlook since September 2022.”

Results are from a statewide poll of 1,018 adults contacted through the probability-based Rutgers-Eagleton/SSRS Garden State Panel from Oct. 15 to Oct. 22. The full sample has a margin of error of +/- 4.1 percentage points. The registered voter subsample contains 929 registered voters and has a margin of error of +/- 4.2 percentage points.

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3 responses to “Gubernatorial Candidate “Who?” New Jersey Voters Are Largely Unaware of Governor Hopefuls One Year Out”

  1. The Democrats need to understand that voters are begging for a candidate who will protect their money. ” Crusades ” are yesterday’s news. There is also no stomach for more ” D.C.ers”. Sherrill and Gottheimer are creatures of Washington and have no clue how to run a State or balance a budget. The only candidate who will protect our money is Steve Sweeney.

  2. Spiller is the quintessential “crusader”. No substance whatsoever, just a bunch of nebulous “values”. Based on his abysmal record in Montclair, I have serious doubts the guy knows how to balance a checkbook. What I do know if that he sure knows how to funnel teachers’ money to fund his own political aspirations.

  3. Spiller is the President of the NJEA. The NJEA endorsement committee interviewed only one gubernatorial candidate , Sean Spiller . Spiller was immediately endorsed by the NJEA committee after the interview.
    1. New Jersey has a shortage of qualified teachers in the classroom and in the pipeline.
    2. New Jersey schools were closed unnecessarily to long because of the pandemic per The New Jersey Independent COVID -19 Report. The decision caused unprecedented learning loss.
    3. Literacy programs and intense tutoring programs took over four years to implement. No sense of urgency for meaningful action.
    4. New Jersey is the sixth most segregated school system in the nation. Deserving students are locked in failing schools with no way out due to a zip code, better known as home rule.
    5. Access to a good education is the civil justice New Jerseyans want and need. All the other civil justice campaigns the school promotes are important , but Education is the Civil Rights issue of today.
    The next Governor of New Jersey will need to address these issues with meaningful solutions.

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