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00000179-2419-d250-a579-e41d3a4d0001The 2019 results are being analyzed. Watch here as details are released.The 2019 Illinois Issues Survey is the second in a planned long-term project which examines the policy preferences of Illinoisans. The study examines policy issues relevant both at the state and national levels across a wide variety of areas. Questions pertaining to immigration, gun control, taxes and the economy, and education policy are asked. The study is designed in a such a way that the interested public and policy makers can make use of the results, which are representative of registered voters in Illinois.The 2019 Illinois Issues Survey was collected and analyzed by the staff in the Survey Research Office in the Center for State Policy and Leadership in partnership with NPR Illinois. The 2018 Illinois Issues Survey Full Report

Survey: Voters Diverge On Gov, Economy

Gov. Pritzker speaks at a Democratic candidate forum
Brian Mackey
/
NPR Illinois
Gov. J.B. Pritzker speaks at a candidate forum in Peoria in this file photo from January 2018.

A majority of Illinoisans think the state is on the wrong track and have a dim view of the economy, but the pessimism doesn’t seem to be affecting Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s job approval.

In a new survey from NPR Illinois and the University of Illinois Springfield, 59 percent of respondents approve of the way the first-term governor is handling his job.

chart showing survey results on Illinois' overall direction, the state's economy, and Gov. J.B. Pritzker's job approval
Credit Brian Mackey / NPR Illinois
/
NPR Illinois
Although a majority of survey respondents think Illinois is on the wrong track and take a dim view of the economy, they're giving higher marks to freshman Gov. J.B. Pritzker's job performance.

Pritzker, a Democrat, is above water in all age groups, and is most popular among young people, those who live in Cook County, and those who identify as black or Latino.

Pritzker’s popularity is somewhat surprising in the context of other findings in the survey. An overwhelming 77 percent of respondents rate the state’s economy as fair or poor. And 3 people out of 5 say they’ve considered moving away.

That, however, may be more talk than reality.

Among the 61 percent who said they’ve thought about moving away in the last year, just ...

  • 16 percent looked at jobs in a new state.
  • 5 percent applied for jobs in a new state.
  • 26 percent looked at housing in a new state.
  • 2 percent applied for housing in a new state.
  • 28 percent looked up the cost of living in a new state.
  • 15 percent looked up the cost of moving to a new state.
  • 9 percent told friends and family they were moving to a new state.

“We were trying to get at the difference between less committed and more committed respondents,” said A.J. Simmons, director of the UIS Survey Research Office, which conducted the survey. “Taking actual steps to prepare for a move, like applying for jobs and housing, suggest a more serious consideration than simply looking.”
For those who said they wanted to leave, the survey asked them to choose up to three reasons from a list. In descending order of popularity, people cited lower state taxes (27%), state government and policies (17%), better weather (15%), lower crime (13%), job opportunities (12%), family or personal reasons (8%) and better schools (6%).

The top potential destinations were Florida (10%), Indiana (8%), Texas (8%), Arizona (6%), California (6%) and Tennessee (6%).

Illinois Issues In-Depth logo

The survey used an online panel of 1,012 Illinois registered voters and ran from Sept. 13-23, 2019. It was designed and analyzed by the Institute for Legal, Legislative, and Policy Studies; the Survey Research Office; and NPR Illinois; all units of the UIS Center for State Policy and Leadership.

Additional results will be released in the coming days, on topics ranging from the proposed graduated income tax to firearms policy.

Brian Mackey formerly reported on state government and politics for NPR Illinois and a dozen other public radio stations across the state. Before that, he was A&E editor at The State Journal-Register and Statehouse bureau chief for the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin.
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