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2022 Ohio gubernatorial election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For related races, see2022 United States gubernatorial elections.

2022 Ohio gubernatorial election

← 2018
November 8, 2022
2026 →
Turnout52.32%[1] (Decrease5.2pp)
 
NomineeMike DeWineNan Whaley
PartyRepublicanDemocratic
Running mateJon HustedCheryl Stephens
Popular vote2,580,4241,545,489
Percentage62.41%37.38%

County results
Congressional district results
Precinct results
DeWine:     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     80–90%     >90%
Whaley:     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     80–90%     >90%
Tie:     50%     No votes

Governor before election

Mike DeWine
Republican

ElectedGovernor

Mike DeWine
Republican

Elections in Ohio
U.S. President
Presidential primaries
U.S. Senate
U.S. House of Representatives
General elections
Gubernatorial elections
Lieutenant Governor elections
Secretary of State elections
Attorney General elections
State Auditor elections
State Treasurer elections
State Supreme Court elections
State House elections
State Senate elections

The2022 Ohio gubernatorial election was held on November 8, 2022, to elect thegovernor of Ohio. IncumbentRepublican GovernorMike DeWine won a second term in alandslide, defeatingDemocratic nomineeNan Whaley, the former mayor ofDayton, with 62.4% of the vote.[2] DeWine's 25-point victory marked the continuation of a trend in which every incumbent Republican governor of Ohio since1994 has won re-election by a double-digit margin.

This was the first time since1994 in whichTrumbull andMahoning counties have gone to the Republican candidate with over 60% of the vote.Hamilton County also voted Republican in a statewide election for the first time sinceOhio's 2016 United States Senate election, which incumbent RepublicanRob Portman also won by over 20 points and nearly 60% of the vote.

Republican primary

[edit]
Former U.S. representativeJim Renacci challenged DeWine in the primary.

Incumbent governorMike DeWine faced backlash from Republicans due to having implemented strictCOVID-19 restrictions, such as a statewide stay at home order and mask mandates.[3][4][5] Due to this, on April 30, 2021, farmer Joe Blystone became the first candidate to announce a primary challenge to DeWine. On June 9, former U.S. representativeJim Renacci also announced a run, later being followed up by former state representative Ron Hood.[6][7][8] As a result, DeWine became the first incumbent Ohio governor to face a primary challenger sinceJim Rhodes in1978 and the first to have multiple challengers sinceMichael Disalle in1962. Initial polling showed Renacci in the lead; however, his lead soon evaporated, as DeWine attempted to appeal to conservatives angry with his COVID-19 response by attackingPresident Joe Biden's policies and signingconstitutional carry into law, allowing permitless carry of firearms.[9][10][11] Incumbent governors rarely ever lose their primaries. Ultimately, DeWine prevailed in the primary election on May 3; however, he only won with a plurality of the vote, which suggests that he could have lost had his opponents not split the vote.[12]

Candidates

[edit]

Nominated

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Mike DeWine

Local officials

Individuals

Labor unions

Organizations

Jim Renacci

State representatives

  • John Becker, former state representative from the 65th district (2013–2020)[40]
  • Jennifer Gross, state representative from the 52nd district (2021–present)[40]
  • Ron Maag, former state representative from the 62nd district (2013–2016) and the 35th district (2009–2013)[40]
  • Seth Morgan, former state representative from the 36th district (2009–2011)[41]
  • Nino Vitale, state representative from the 85th district (2015–present)[41]
  • Scott Wiggam, state representative from the 1st district (2017–present)[40]

Local officials

Individuals

Organizations

Declined to endorse

Organizations

Polling

[edit]

Graphical summary

This graph was using thelegacy Graph extension, which is no longer supported. It needs to be converted to thenew Chart extension.
Source of poll
aggregation
Dates
administered
Dates
updated
Joe
Blystone
Mike
DeWine
Jim
Renacci
Other
[a]
Margin
Real Clear Politics[49]February 25 – May 1, 2022May 2, 202216.5%48.0%31.0%4.5%DeWine +17.0
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[b]
Margin
of error
Joe
Blystone
Mike
DeWine
Ron
Hood
Jim
Renacci
OtherUndecided
The Trafalgar Group (R)[50]April 29 – May 1, 20221,081 (LV)± 3.0%19%47%2%27%5%
Emerson College[51]April 28–29, 2022885 (LV)± 3.2%12%45%2%30%12%
Fox News[52]April 20–24, 2022906 (LV)± 3.0%19%43%24%1%12%
The Trafalgar Group (R)[53]April 13–14, 20221,078 (LV)± 3.0%24%40%2%26%10%
University of Akron[54]February 17 – March 15, 2022– (LV)51%23%10%17%
Fox News[55]March 2–6, 2022918 (LV)± 3.0%21%50%18%<1%10%
Emerson College[56]February 25–26, 2022410 (LV)± 4.8%20%34%0%9%36%
The Trafalgar Group (R)[57]February 1–4, 20221,066 (LV)± 3.0%20%41%23%16%
Public Policy Polling (D)[58][A]January 25–26, 2022626 (LV)± 3.9%38%33%29%
Fabrizio Lee (R)[59][B]January 11–13, 2022800 (LV)± 3.5%38%46%16%
Fabrizio Lee (R)[60][B]May 2021600 (LV)± 4.0%34%42%24%

Results

[edit]
Results by county:
  DeWine
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  Renacci
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  Blystone
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
Republican primary results[61][62]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican
519,59448.11%
Republican
302,49428.01%
Republican
  • Joe Blystone
  • Jeremiah Workman
235,58421.81%
Republican22,4112.07%
Total votes1,080,083100.0%

Democratic primary

[edit]
FormerCincinnati MayorJohn Cranley finished second in the primary.

Candidates

[edit]

Nominated

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
John Cranley

State senators

State representatives

Individuals

Newspapers

Nan Whaley

U.S. senators

State senators

State representatives

Local officials

Individuals

  • Joe Rugola, executive director of the Ohio Association of Public School Employees (OAPSE)[77]

Unions

Organizations

Declined to endorse

Organizations

Polling

[edit]
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[b]
Margin
of error
John
Cranley
Nan
Whaley
OtherUndecided
University of Akron[54]February 17 – March 15, 2022– (LV)18%23%6%54%
Emerson College[56]February 25–26, 2022313 (LV)± 5.5%16%16%69%
Clarity Campaign Labs (D)[83][C]January 17–19, 2022670 (LV)± 3.8%20%33%48%

Results

[edit]
Results by county:
  Whaley
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  •   70–80%
  •   80–90%
  Cranley
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
Democratic primary results[61][62]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Democratic
331,01465.01%
Democratic178,13234.99%
Total votes509,146100.0%

Independents

[edit]

Disqualified

[edit]
  • F. Patrick Cunnane
    • Running mate: Mary Cunnane
  • Niel Petersen, pastor[84]
    • Running mate: Michael V Stewart

Write-in candidates

[edit]

Declared

[edit]
  • Timothy Grady, college student[85]
    • Running mate: Dayna Bickley[86]
  • Craig Patton[86]
    • Running mate: Collin Cook[86]
  • Renea Turner[86]
    • Running mate: Adina Pelletier[86]
  • Marshall Usher[86]
    • Running mate: Shannon Walker[86]

Endorsements

[edit]
Timothy Grady

Individuals

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
SourceRankingAs of
The Cook Political Report[87]Solid RSeptember 29, 2022
Inside Elections[88]Solid RJuly 22, 2022
Sabato's Crystal Ball[89]Safe RJune 2, 2022
Politico[90]Solid RNovember 3, 2022
RCP[91]Safe ROctober 20, 2022
Fox News[92]Likely RMay 12, 2022
538[93]Solid RJuly 31, 2022
Elections Daily[94]Safe RNovember 7, 2022

Post-primary endorsements

[edit]
Mike DeWine (R)

U.S. executive branch officials

State officials

State senators

Individuals

Newspapers

Organizations

Unions

Nan Whaley (D)

Newspapers

Unions

Polling

[edit]

Aggregate polls

Source of poll
aggregation
Dates
administered
Dates
updated
Mike
DeWine (R)
Nan
Whaley (D)
Undecided
[c]
Margin
Real Clear Politics[105]October 7–22, 2022October 25, 202255.8%37.5%6.7%DeWine +18.3
FiveThirtyEight[106]August 16 – October 25, 2022October 25, 202255.5%36.1%8.4%DeWine +19.3
Average55.6%36.8%7.6%DeWine +18.8

Graphical summary

This graph was using thelegacy Graph extension, which is no longer supported. It needs to be converted to thenew Chart extension.
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[b]
Margin
of error
Mike
DeWine (R)
Nan
Whaley (D)
OtherUndecided
Civiqs[107]November 4–7, 2022716 (LV)± 4.1%53%39%6%[d]2%
Research Co.[108]November 4–6, 2022450 (LV)± 4.6%57%37%6%
Targoz Market Research[109]November 2–6, 2022505 (LV)± 4.3%62%32%5%[e]
The Trafalgar Group (R)[110]November 3–5, 20221,123 (LV)± 2.9%59%34%8%
Data for Progress (D)[111]November 2–5, 20221,413 (LV)± 3.0%62%38%
Cygnal (R)[112]November 1–3, 20221,498 (LV)± 2.5%56%37%7%
Remington Research Group (R)[113]November 1–2, 20221,125 (LV)± 2.8%58%35%7%
Emerson College[114]October 30 – November 1, 20221,000 (LV)± 3.0%55%34%5%[f]7%
Cygnal (R)[115]October 29 – November 1, 20221,520 (LV)± 2.5%56%36%8%
Cygnal (R)[116]October 26–30, 20221,510 (LV)± 2.5%56%36%9%
Cygnal (R)[117]October 24–28, 20221,776 (LV)± 2.3%56%35%9%
Cygnal (R)[118]October 22–26, 20221,817 (LV)± 2.3%56%35%9%
Cygnal (R)[119]October 20–24, 20221,886 (LV)± 2.3%55%37%8%
Baldwin Wallace University[120]October 20–23, 20221,068 (LV)± 3.5%57%40%3%
Cygnal (R)[121]October 18–22, 20221,547 (LV)± 2.5%55%37%8%
Marist College[122]October 17–20, 20221,141 (RV)± 3.9%53%40%1%[g]6%
942 (LV)± 4.3%54%41%1%[h]3%
Cygnal (R)[123]October 16–20, 20221,540 (LV)± 2.5%55%37%8%
Siena College[124]October 14–19, 2022644 (LV)± 5.1%58%34%3%[i]6%
Cygnal (R)[125]October 14–18, 20221,438 (LV)± 2.6%56%35%9%
Ohio Northern University/Lucid[126]October 11–15, 2022668 (LV)± 3.8%60%29%1%[j]10%
Suffolk University[127]October 11–15, 2022500 (LV)± 4.4%56%38%1%[k]5%
The Trafalgar Group (R)[128]October 10–12, 20221,081 (LV)± 2.9%55%37%8%
Data for Progress (D)[129]October 7–12, 20221,016 (LV)± 3.0%57%38%5%
Cygnal (R)[130][D]October 6–8, 2022640 (LV)57%35%8%
Emerson College[131]October 6–7, 20221,000 (LV)± 3.0%50%36%6%[l]8%
Siena College[132]September 18–22, 2022642 (LV)± 4.4%55%32%3%[m]10%
Baldwin Wallace University[133]September 12–15, 2022855 (LV)± 4.1%57%39%4%
Marist College[134]September 12–15, 20221,200 (RV)± 3.6%55%37%8%
1,009 (LV)± 3.9%55%39%6%
Emerson College[135]September 10–13, 20221000 (LV)± 3%50%33%5%12%
Civiqs[136]September 10–13, 2022780 (LV)± 4%44%41%10%5%
Fallon Research[137]September 6–11, 2022500 (RV)± 4.3%49%37%14%
Suffolk University[138]September 5–7, 2022500 (LV)± 4.4%54%39%7%
Echelon Insights[139]August 31 – September 7, 2022831 (LV)± 4.3%54%35%11%
Survey Monkey (D)[140][E]August 31 – September 2, 2022987 (RV)± 3.0%52%31%17%
519 (LV)± 3.0%53%37%10%
The Trafalgar Group (R)[141]August 16–19, 20221,087 (LV)± 2.9%54%38%8%
Emerson College[142]August 15–16, 2022925 (LV)± 3.2%49%33%8%11%
Lake Research Partners (D)[143][F]August 4–9, 2022600 (LV)± 4.0%44%43%8%5%
Lake Research Partners (D)[144][F]August 3–9, 2022600 (LV)± 4.0%44%43%7%6%
Suffolk University[145]May 22–24, 2022500 (LV)± 4.4%45%30%11%[n]13%
Redfield & Wilton Strategies[146]August 20–24, 20211,200 (RV)± 2.8%44%25%10%16%
1,160 (LV)± 2.9%46%27%11%16%
Hypothetical polling

Mike DeWine vs. John Cranley

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[b]
Margin
of error
Mike
DeWine (R)
John
Cranley (D)
OtherUndecided
Redfield & Wilton Strategies[146]August 20–24, 20211,200 (RV)± 2.8%44%24%10%16%
1,160 (LV)± 2.9%47%25%11%15%

Results

[edit]
State Senate district results
State House district results

According to a survey conducted byNORC forFox News and theAssociated Press, most white people (68% to 32%), Latinos (64% to 33%), and other minorities (60% to 36%) voted for DeWine, while most African Americans voted for Whaley (73% to 27%).[147]

2022 Ohio gubernatorial election[62]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Republican
2,580,42462.41%+12.02%
Democratic
1,545,48937.38%−9.30%
Write-in8,9640.22%N/A
Total votes4,134,877100.0%
Turnout4,201,36852.32%
Registered electors8,029,950
Republicanhold

By county

[edit]
CountyMike DeWine
Republican
Nan Whaley
Democratic
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal
#%#%#%#%
Adams7,34883.83%1,39515.92%220.25%5,95367.91%8,765
Allen25,46177.97%6,83520.93%3601.10%18,62657.04%32,656
Ashland14,51079.10%3,72920.33%1050.57%10,78158.77%18,344
Ashtabula20,90368.16%9,62131.37%1420.46%11,28236.79%30,666
Athens8,92046.63%10,15553.08%550.29%-1,235-6.45%19,130
Auglaize16,01985.80%2,47413.25%1780.96%13,54572.55%18,671
Belmont16,88474.74%5,54624.55%1610.70%11,33850.19%22,591
Brown11,65882.42%2,37216.77%1140.81%9,28665.65%14,144
Butler90,06370.12%38,18629.73%1990.15%51,87740.39%128,448
Carroll8,07479.51%1,96919.39%1121.11%6,10560.12%10,155
Champaign11,32478.34%2,96220.49%1691.17%8,36257.85%14,455
Clark31,12170.88%12,55928.60%2280.51%18,56242.28%43,908
Clermont59,15373.54%20,88825.97%3950.49%38,26547.57%80,436
Clinton11,47981.05%2,58318.24%1010.71%8,89662.81%14,163
Columbiana28,01378.93%7,16920.20%3110.87%20,84458.73%35,493
Coshocton8,90178.44%2,36920.88%780.69%6,53257.56%11,348
Crawford11,78179.43%2,94919.88%1010.68%8,83259.55%14,831
Cuyahoga175,69742.73%234,07656.93%1,3890.34%-58,379-14.20%411,162
Darke17,27886.96%2,46412.40%1280.65%14,81474.56%19,870
Defiance10,18075.87%3,13923.40%980.73%7,04152.47%13,417
Delaware62,73363.49%35,94236.37%1370.14%26,79127.12%98,812
Erie18,65164.31%10,23635.30%1130.39%8,41529.01%29,000
Fairfield41,01769.53%17,84230.25%1290.22%23,17539.28%58,988
Fayette6,91381.88%1,47617.48%540.64%5,43764.40%8,443
Franklin182,91442.87%242,33256.79%1,4640.34%-59,418-13.92%426,710
Fulton13,00879.22%3,32420.24%880.53%9,68458.98%16,420
Gallia7,22979.72%1,67718.49%1621.79%5,55261.23%9,068
Geauga28,93167.97%13,34431.35%2890.68%15,58736.62%42,564
Greene45,78768.90%20,56530.95%1010.15%25,22237.95%66,453
Guernsey9,48678.04%2,53020.81%1391.14%6,95657.23%12,155
Hamilton155,57751.18%148,02348.70%3710.12%7,5542.48%303,971
Hancock20,97577.07%6,12722.51%1140.42%14,84854.56%27,216
Hardin7,21080.42%1,71719.15%380.42%5,49361.27%8,965
Harrison4,07978.61%1,07220.66%380.73%3,00757.95%5,189
Henry8,43780.87%1,94918.68%470.45%6,48862.19%10,433
Highland10,88083.31%2,11416.19%650.50%8,76667.12%13,059
Hocking7,04673.83%2,40525.20%920.96%4,64148.63%9,543
Holmes7,26285.96%1,11513.20%710.84%6,14772.76%8,448
Huron13,90475.06%4,46424.10%1550.84%9,44050.96%18,523
Jackson7,03379.38%1,74919.74%780.88%5,28459.64%8,860
Jefferson16,92973.90%5,85525.56%1230.53%11,07448.34%22,907
Knox17,34975.22%5,52523.95%1910.83%11,82451.27%23,065
Lake61,12164.66%33,09835.01%3080.33%28,02329.65%94,527
Lawrence13,60277.86%3,81521.84%520.30%9,78756.02%17,469
Licking46,88170.54%19,14328.80%4390.66%27,73841.74%66,463
Logan13,55382.05%2,77716.81%1881.14%10,77665.24%16,518
Lorain66,28959.69%44,31439.90%4460.40%21,97519.79%111,049
Lucas72,21454.14%60,51645.37%6610.50%11,6988.77%133,391
Madison10,78376.25%3,24422.94%1150.81%7,53953.31%14,142
Mahoning55,67665.20%29,44434.48%2760.32%26,23230.72%85,396
Marion14,26374.17%4,81825.05%1490.78%9,44549.12%19,230
Medina53,49868.47%24,03430.76%6040.78%29,46437.71%78,136
Meigs5,75578.20%1,51920.64%851.15%4,23657.56%7,359
Mercer15,40386.89%2,23012.58%1040.53%13,17374.31%17,727
Miami33,70979.46%8,45219.92%2610.62%25,25759.54%42,422
Monroe3,79377.97%1,02221.01%501.03%2,77156.96%4,865
Montgomery110,67259.05%76,15440.63%6030.32%34,51818.42%187,429
Morgan3,80879.35%95819.96%330.69%2,85059.39%4,799
Morrow10,69880.52%2,47518.63%1130.85%8,22361.89%13,286
Muskingum21,06476.76%6,23022.70%1490.54%14,83454.06%27,443
Noble3,78581.93%77816.84%571.24%3,00765.09%4,620
Ottawa13,31271.79%5,17127.89%600.32%8,14143.90%18,543
Paulding5,16979.58%1,28519.78%410.63%3,88459.80%6,495
Perry9,26378.31%2,51521.26%500.43%6,74857.05%11,828
Pickaway15,20977.45%4,28921.84%1390.71%10,92055.61%19,637
Pike5,88975.66%1,84223.67%520.67%4,04751.99%7,783
Portage37,63462.15%22,66537.43%2550.42%14,96924.72%60,554
Preble13,17283.38%2,50415.85%1210.77%10,66867.53%15,797
Putnam13,40289.09%1,55010.30%920.62%11,85278.79%15,044
Richland30,89974.46%10,42925.13%1700.41%20,47049.33%41,498
Ross16,49672.79%6,03726.64%1300.57%10,45946.15%22,663
Sandusky15,71273.10%5,63126.20%1500.70%10,08146.90%21,493
Scioto15,93475.84%5,04824.03%290.14%10,88651.81%21,011
Seneca13,66775.45%4,31923.84%1290.71%9,34851.61%18,115
Shelby15,71786.69%2,29112.64%1220.67%13,42674.05%18,130
Stark90,38767.49%43,08232.17%4630.35%47,30535.32%133,932
Summit105,77753.20%92,20646.37%8540.43%13,5716.83%198,837
Trumbull48,45966.48%24,16333.15%2680.37%24,29633.33%72,890
Tuscarawas22,29673.64%7,68525.38%2940.97%14,61148.26%30,275
Union18,38772.10%6,91827.13%1960.77%11,46944.97%25,501
Van Wert8,27982.22%1,70216.90%880.88%6,57765.32%10,069
Vinton3,11177.87%83220.83%521.30%2,27957.04%3,995
Warren74,34572.95%27,07026.56%4930.48%47,27546.39%101,908
Washington16,93474.79%5,62524.84%820.37%11,30949.95%22,641
Wayne28,28473.76%9,82425.62%2380.63%18,46048.14%38,346
Williams10,33179.99%2,54319.69%410.32%7,78860.30%12,915
Wood31,39964.67%17,06035.14%950.20%14,33929.53%48,554
Wyandot6,53780.17%1,55819.11%590.71%4,97961.06%8,154
Totals2,580,68562.27%1,545,68837.30%17,9510.43%1,034,99724.97%4,144,324

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

Swing by county
Legend
  •   Democratic — +7.5-10%
  •   Democratic — +5-7.5%
  •   Democratic — +2.5-5%
  •   Democratic — +0-2.5%
  •   Republican — +0-2.5%
  •   Republican — +2.5-5%
  •   Republican — +5-7.5%
  •   Republican — +7.5-10%
  •   Republican — +10-12.5%
  •   Republican — +12.5-15%
  •   Republican — +>15%
Trend by county
Legend
  •   Democratic — +7.5-10%
  •   Democratic — +5-7.5%
  •   Democratic — +2.5-5%
  •   Democratic — +0-2.5%
  •   Republican — +0-2.5%
  •   Republican — +2.5-5%
  •   Republican — +5-7.5%
  •   Republican — +7.5-10%
  •   Republican — +10-12.5%
  •   Republican — +12.5-15%
  •   Republican — +>15%
County flips
Legend
  • Democratic

      Hold

    Republican

      Hold
      Gain from Democratic

By congressional district

[edit]

DeWine won 13 of 15 congressional districts, including three that elected Democrats.[148]

DistrictDeWineWhaleyRepresentative
1st55%45%Steve Chabot (117th Congress)
Greg Landsman (118th Congress)
2nd77%23%Brad Wenstrup
3rd37%63%Joyce Beatty
4th74%26%Jim Jordan
5th71%29%Bob Latta
6th72%28%Bill Johnson
7th63%37%Bob Gibbs (117th Congress)
Max Miller (118th Congress)
8th69%31%Warren Davidson
9th63%37%Marcy Kaptur
10th62%38%Mike Turner
11th30%70%Shontel Brown
12th72%28%Troy Balderson
13th57%43%Tim Ryan (117th Congress)
Emilia Sykes (118th Congress)
14th66%34%David Joyce
15th62%38%Mike Carey

Analysis

[edit]

Voter demographics

[edit]

Voter demographic data was collected byCNN. The voter survey is based onexit polls. There were 3,772 total respondents.[149]

2022 Ohio gubernatorial election (CNN)
Demographic subgroupDeWineWhaley% of
total vote
Ideology
Liberals138620
Moderates574242
Conservatives93638
Party
Democrats168430
Republicans96341
Independents623729
Age
18–24 years old44564
25–29 years old40606
30–39 years old514812
40–49 years old603816
50–64 years old683131
65 and older683231
Gender
Men663352
Women584148
Marital status
Married643565
Unmarried564235
Marital status by gender
Married men702931
Married women584134
Unmarried men593918
Unmarried women534617
Race/ethnicity
White673284
Black326712
Latino48522
Gender by race
White men702944
White women643540
Black men41596
Black women25756
Latino menN/AN/A1
Latino womenN/AN/A1
Other racial/ethnic groupsN/AN/A2
Education
Never attendedcollege683217
Some college education643525
Associate degree633615
Bachelor's degree584025
Advanced degree584118
Education by race
White college graduates613837
White no college degree722746
Non-white college graduates44566
Non-white no college degree376311
Education by gender/race
White women with college degrees574218
White women without college degrees693021
White men with college degrees653419
White men without college degrees742525
Non-white396016
Issue regarded as most important
Crime66348
Inflation811835
Immigration9269
Gun policy564216
Abortion287126
Abortion should be
Legal435658
Illegal89937
2020 presidential vote
Biden207943
Trump95350
Biden legitimately won in 2020
Yes376357
No95339
Union household
Yes564321
No623779
Area type
Urban534633
Suburban683151
Rural623816

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.
  2. ^abcdKey:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  3. ^Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.
  4. ^"Someone else" with 6%
  5. ^"All others" with 5%
  6. ^"Someone else" with 5%
  7. ^"Another party's candidate" with 1%
  8. ^"Another party's candidate" with 1%
  9. ^"Another candidate" with 2%; "Not going to vote" with 1%
  10. ^"Other" with 1%
  11. ^"Someone else" with 1%
  12. ^"Someone else" with 6%
  13. ^"Another candidate" with 2%; "Not going to vote" with 1%
  14. ^Petersen with 11%, "someone else" with 1%

Partisan clients

  1. ^This poll was sponsored by the Democratic Governors Association
  2. ^abThis poll was sponsored by Renacci's campaign committee
  3. ^This poll was sponsored by Whaley's campaign
  4. ^This poll was sponsored by American Greatness
  5. ^This poll was sponsored by Center Street PAC, which opposes DeWine
  6. ^abThis poll was circulated by the Ohio Democratic Party

References

[edit]
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  115. ^Cygnal (R)
  116. ^Cygnal (R)
  117. ^Cygnal (R)
  118. ^Cygnal (R)
  119. ^Cygnal (R)
  120. ^Baldwin Wallace University
  121. ^Cygnal (R)
  122. ^Marist College
  123. ^Cygnal (R)
  124. ^Siena College
  125. ^Cygnal (R)
  126. ^Ohio Northern University/Lucid
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  130. ^Cygnal (R)
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  138. ^Suffolk University
  139. ^Echelon Insights
  140. ^Survey Monkey (D)
  141. ^The Trafalgar Group (R)
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External links

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