www.marylandmatters.org Open in urlscan Pro
2606:4700:10::6816:16  Public Scan

Submitted URL: https://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001fah0_Byburpn75ILf9G2lJHL3XGIrd5RXDmIKTpv8nQ4BaNEF0aDG54-01HVjlUvgg9mIFjBfKSUi4q1vQxl...
Effective URL: https://www.marylandmatters.org/2023/12/12/poll-md-voters-fairly-content-seek-a-bold-agenda-in-upcoming-legislative-session-if-i...
Submission: On December 18 via manual from ES — Scanned from ES

Form analysis 2 forms found in the DOM

https://www.marylandmatters.org/

<form action="https://www.marylandmatters.org/">
  <div class="input-group ">
    <input type="search" id="search-field" class="form-control" placeholder="Search Maryland Matters" value="" name="s" title="Search for:">
    <span class="input-group-btn">
      <button class="btn btn-search" aria-label="" type="submit"><span></span></button>
    </span>
  </div>
  <!-- .input-group -->
</form>

Name: mc-embedded-subscribe-formPOST ?u&id

<form action="?u&amp;id" method="post" id="mc-embedded-subscribe-form" name="mc-embedded-subscribe-form" class="validate" target="_blank" novalidate="novalidate">
  <div id="mc_embed_signup_scroll">
    <div class="mc-field-group">
      <label for="mce-FNAME">First Name</label>
      <input class="" placeholder="First Name" id="mce-FNAME" name="FNAME" type="text" value="">
    </div>
    <div class="mc-field-group">
      <label for="mce-LNAME">Last Name</label>
      <input class="" placeholder="Last Name" id="mce-LNAME" name="LNAME" type="text" value="">
    </div>
    <div class="mc-field-group">
      <label for="mce-EMAIL">Email Address <span class="asterisk">*</span></label>
      <input class="required email" placeholder="Email Address" id="mce-EMAIL" name="EMAIL" type="email" value="" aria-required="true">
    </div>
    <div class="clear" id="mce-responses">
      <div class="response" id="mce-error-response" style="display:none"></div>
      <div class="response" id="mce-success-response" style="display:none"></div>
    </div><!-- real people should not fill this in and expect good things - do not remove this or risk form bot signups-->
    <div aria-hidden="true" style="position: absolute; left: -5000px;">
      <input type="text" name="b__" tabindex="-1" value="">
    </div>
    <div class="clear">
      <input class="btn btn-secondary" id="mc-embedded-subscribe" name="subscribe" type="submit" value="Subscribe">
    </div>
  </div>
</form>

Text Content

Skip to main content
 * Government & Politics
   * View All
   * Election 2024
 * Environment
   * View All
   * Climate Calling
 * Health
   * View All
   * COVID-19 in Maryland
 * Education
 * Justice
 * Transportation
 * Work & the Economy
 * Commentary
   * View All
   * Alanah Davis
   * Kalman Hettleman
   * Josh Kurtz
   * All Commentary



NONPROFIT. NONPARTISAN. NEWS YOU CAN TRUST.

 * Subscribe
 * Support us




Government & Politics


POLL: MD VOTERS FAIRLY CONTENT, SEEK A BOLD AGENDA IN UPCOMING LEGISLATIVE
SESSION (IF IT’S NOT TOO EXPENSIVE)

By Josh Kurtz
December 12, 2023
Share Tweet Share Email Print
The Maryland State House. Photo by Bryan P. Sears.

On the eve of a new year — and a new General Assembly session — Maryland voters
are generally optimistic about the future, though many have jitters about
inflation and crime in Baltimore. They are also looking to their government
leaders for bold solutions — though it isn’t clear whether there’s the political
will or the desire by taxpayers to pay for the initiatives that may be needed to
move the state’s economy forward.

Those are some of the conclusions of a recent issues survey for Maryland that
was taken by a Democratic pollster and commissioned by a leading Annapolis
lobbying firm and a politically wired public affairs strategist.

The poll showed that many voters are comfortable in their own lives and are
enthusiastic about several proposed measures that could improve Maryland’s
economy and create more opportunity and equity for residents who are struggling
financially.

“I think one of the takeaways is, particularly with budget cuts on the horizon
and so much focus on them, that Maryland voters are relatively optimistic and
doing OK,” said Donna Victoria, whose Takoma Park-based polling firm, Victoria
Research, conducted the survey from Nov. 9 to Nov. 14. “It’s not the doom and
gloom about the economy that the mainstream media is promoting.”

The poll was broken into two parts, testing the opinions of 813 likely 2024
general election voters of all political persuasions, and 502 registered
Baltimore City Democrats who are likely to vote in the city’s primaries next
December. The statewide survey had a 3.3-point margin of error, while the
Baltimore Democratic portion of the survey had a 4.4-point error margin.

The 45-question poll was paid for by the Annapolis lobbying firm Perry White
Ross and Jacobson, whose senior partner is Tim Perry, a former chief of staff to
the late Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr. (D), and Blended Public
Affairs, whose principal is Alexandra Hughes, a former chief of staff to House
Speaker Adrienne A. Jones (D-Baltimore County) and the late Speaker Mike Busch
(D).

Both firms have an array of clients who will be closely monitoring the
developments in state government in the months ahead. Perry White Ross and
Jacobson is one of the top-grossing lobbying firms in the state.

In the poll, the basic sentiment from voters is that the state economy is in
good shape and that their own personal financial standing is also decent. Asked
to rate economic conditions in Maryland, 9% of the respondents in the statewide
survey answered excellent, while 42% said good, 36% said not so good, 11% said
poor, and 2% weren’t sure. Among Baltimore City Democrats, 5% said excellent,
34% said good, 40% said not so good, 17% said poor, and 4% weren’t sure.

Asked to assess their own financial situation “for the next year or so,” 32% of
statewide voters said they were doing well, 17% said they were “doing well and
saving for things I want,” 31% said they were living paycheck to paycheck and
15% said they were struggling. Six percent said they weren’t sure. Among
Baltimore City Democrats, 29% said they were doing well, 13% said they were
doing well and saving, 35% said they were living paycheck to paycheck, 16% said
they were struggling, and 7% said they weren’t sure.

Statewide voters said fighting inflation should be policymakers’ top priority,
with fighting crime a close second. Considerably farther down the priority list
were, in order, health care and prescription drug affordability, lower taxes,
improving K-12 education, attracting new jobs and economic growth, stronger gun
bans, protect access to abortion, better road and transit infrastructure,
defending democracy and fighting voter suppression, reducing climate change with
green energy, and Chesapeake Bay health.

For Baltimore Democrats, crime was far and away the No. 1 issue, with education
and stronger gun laws bunched together in second and third place. Rounding out
the list, in order: health care, transportation, new jobs, inflation, abortion
rights, voting rights, lower taxes, climate change and Bay health.

Victoria said it was apparent from the poll that voters are well aware that they
have “a new generation of leaders” and are looking to them to find creative
solutions to the state’s challenges.

Predictably, Maryland voters believe they pay too much taxes — two-thirds of
voters gave that answer in the statewide survey, and just a tad less said the
same in the Baltimore City poll. But overall, voters seemed reasonably satisfied
that they were getting a decent value for the taxes they pay.

Asked to grade the services and quality of life they derive from state
government for their tax dollar, 8% of statewide voters gave an A grade, 28%
said B, 34% said C, 16% said D, 11% said F, and 4% weren’t sure. Among Baltimore
City Democrats, 4% gave an A grade, 24% said B, 34% said C, 19% said D, 14% said
F, and 5% weren’t sure.

“Nobody loves paying for things,” Victoria said. “But people have a sense that
they have a pretty good life here.”

Where the economic power lies

Marylanders are also taking a divergent view of where the economic power lies in
the state. To the question “Do you think that the Washington, D.C., region of
Maryland or the Baltimore region is the main driver of the economy for the
state?” 53% of statewide voters answered the D.C. region, 24% said the Baltimore
region, and 23% weren’t sure. Baltimore City Democrats were split into thirds on
the question.

The pollster asked voters about several potential policy initiatives or
government investments that could boost the state economy and in all cases found
widespread support from Marylanders in both survey samples. The initiatives
were:

 * State investments to keep the Washington Commanders’ stadium in Maryland (70%
   of statewide voters approved)
 * Policies that encourage the construction of data centers in the state (74%)
 * The redevelopment of underused areas in Baltimore for multifamily housing
   (80%)
 * Construction of more affordable housing generally (78%)
 * Expansion of offshore wind energy (72%)
 * A push for more biotech, cybersecurity and health care facilities (84%)
 * Establishment of a cyber hub near the proposed new FBI headquarters in
   Greenbelt (72%)
 * Taking advantage of the state’s laws protecting abortion rights and boosting
   education spending to attract out-of-state businesses (76%)
 * Promoting a newly revamped Preakness Stakes and tying it to the state’s
   historic horse racing industry (66%)
 * Doing a better job of promoting the state’s natural resources and history for
   tourism (80%)
 * Allowing beer and wine sales in grocery stores (76%)
 * Creating a better mass transit system in the Baltimore area (78%)

Beyond supporting these initiatives, survey respondents overwhelmingly said they
saw a statewide economic benefit to them.

Asked about two potential new revenue sources for state government, more than
two-thirds of voters said they supported Maryland joining half a dozen other
states in legalizing and taxing iGaming. More than half said they supported
charging out-of-state drivers more for Maryland tolls than in-state residents.

“There was a general receptivity to anything that could expand the business and
economic footprint of Maryland,” Victoria said.

On other issues likely to come before the General Assembly in 2024:

 * 58% of statewide voters, and 55% of Democrats in Baltimore City, said they
   would support a bill to legalize medical aid-in-dying.
 * More than two-thirds of statewide voters, and more than three-quarters of
   Baltimore Democrats, said they would support legislation that would encourage
   greater housing density.
 * 59% of statewide voters, and 70% of Baltimore Democrats, support the state
   moving to “swiftly” regulate artificial intelligence.
 * 70% of statewide voters, and 86% of Democrats in Baltimore, said the state
   should do more to reduce disparities in the state, especially as the U.S.
   Supreme Court chips away at diversity and equity programs.
 * Three-quarters of voters agreed that revitalization of Harborplace in
   downtown Baltimore, and state investments in the Baltimore Orioles and
   Baltimore Ravens stadiums are important to the city’s success.

Republish
Tags: Alexandra HughesDonna VictoriaTim Perry
Share Tweet Share Email Print


JOSH KURTZ



FOUNDING EDITOR

Founding Editor Josh Kurtz is a veteran chronicler of Maryland politics and
government. He began covering the State House in 1995 for The Gazette
newspapers, and has been writing about state and local politics ever since. He
was an editor at Roll Call, the Capitol Hill newspaper, for eight years, and for
eight years was the editor of E&E Daily, which covers energy and environmental
policy on Capitol Hill. For 6 1/2 years Kurtz wrote a weekly column on state
politics for Center Maryland and has written for several other Maryland
publications as well. Kurtz regularly gives speeches and appears on TV and radio
shows to discuss Maryland politics.

Republish
All posts by Josh Kurtz


DID YOU GET THE MEMO?

Visit the SUBSCRIBE page to sign up for our morning newsletter.

First Name
Last Name
Email Address *





RELATED ARTICLES


MOORE FACES GREAT EXPECTATIONS AND THE WEIGHT OF HISTORY AS HE TAKES OFFICE

Josh Kurtz
January 18, 2023

How does a 44-year-old history-making first-time officeholder measure up to all
the hype and expectations?


A GROWING TREND: MORE BLACK WOMEN AMONG ANNAPOLIS LOBBYING CORPS

Elizabeth Shwe
April 15, 2022

When Lisa Harris Jones started lobbying in Annapolis in the late 1990s, she was
almost always one of the few Black women in a…


JONES ANNOUNCES JEREMY BAKER AS NEXT CHIEF OF STAFF

Bennett Leckrone
December 10, 2021

Jeremy P. Baker will take over as chief of staff to House Speaker Adrienne A.
Jones (D-Baltimore County) after Alexandra M. Hughes departs at…


CELEBRATING 6 YEARS OF NONPROFIT NEWS.



DONATE


RECENT NEWS


RASKIN, DEMOCRATS QUESTION SOCIAL MEDIA GIANTS ON SPREAD OF ABORTION
MISINFORMATION


ADMINISTRATION’S CLIMATE PLAN COMING SOON — BUT NOT SOON ENOUGH FOR HOUSE
HEARING


POLITICAL NOTES: MOORE’S STAFF SHAKEUP AND POLL NUMBERS, NEW BAY CHIEF, ANOTHER
CD-3 CANDIDATE, GIVING UP THE MILKSHAKE, AND SENATE RACE UPDATES


FRANK DEFILIPPO, SAGE OBSERVER OF MD. POLITICS, DIES AT AGE 93


MOORE ISSUES EXECUTIVE ORDER TO ‘BROADEN’ STATE EFFORTS TO COMBAT DRUG OVERDOSES


DID YOU GET THE MEMO?

Sign up to get the Maryland Matters Memo in your inbox every morning.

SUBSCRIBE


MORE IN GOVERNMENT & POLITICS


RASKIN, DEMOCRATS QUESTION SOCIAL MEDIA GIANTS ON SPREAD OF ABORTION
MISINFORMATION


POLITICAL NOTES: MOORE’S STAFF SHAKEUP AND POLL NUMBERS, NEW BAY CHIEF, ANOTHER
CD-3 CANDIDATE, GIVING UP THE MILKSHAKE, AND SENATE RACE UPDATES


FRANK DEFILIPPO, SAGE OBSERVER OF MD. POLITICS, DIES AT AGE 93


MOORE ISSUES EXECUTIVE ORDER TO ‘BROADEN’ STATE EFFORTS TO COMBAT DRUG OVERDOSES


BRAVEBOY, BATES JOIN TO INTRODUCE LEGISLATIVE PRIORITIES BEFORE UPCOMING GENERAL
ASSEMBLY SESSION

Nonprofit. Nonpartisan. News you can trust.

 * MARYLAND MATTERS

 * About
 * Subscribe
 * Ethics Policy
 * Support us

 * DEMOCRACY TOOLKIT

 * Register to Vote
 * Find Your State Legislators
 * Contact Your U.S. Representatives
 * Contact Your U.S. Senators

FOLLOW US

 * Facebook
 * Twitter
 * Instagram
 * Podcast

 * Statement of Editorial Independence
 * Contact us

Copyright © 2023 Maryland Matters P.O. Box 11121, Takoma Park, MD 20913
×

REPUBLISHING TERMS

Our stories may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide
proper attribution and link to our website. Please see our republishing
guidelines for use of photos and graphics.

If you have any questions, please email editor Danielle Gaines at
dgaines@marylandmatters.org.

TO REPUBLISH, COPY THE FOLLOWING TEXT AND PASTE IT INTO YOUR HTML EDITOR.


LICENSE

Creative Commons Attribution
Poll: Md voters fairly content, seek a bold agenda in upcoming legislative
session (if it’s not too expensive)On the eve of a new year — and a new General
Assembly session — Maryland voters are generally optimistic about the future,
though many have jitters about inflation and crime in Baltimore. They are also
looking to their government leaders for bold solutions — though it isn't clear
whether there's the political will or the desire by taxpayers to pay for the
initiatives that may be needed to move the state's economy forward. Those are
some of the conclusions of a recent issues survey for Maryland that was taken by
a Democratic pollster and commissioned by a leading Annapolis lobbying firm and
a politically wired public affairs strategist. The poll showed that many voters
are comfortable in their own lives and are enthusiastic about several proposed
measures that could improve Maryland's economy and create more opportunity and
equity for residents who are struggling financially. "I think one of the
takeaways is, particularly with budget cuts on the horizon and so much focus on
them, that Maryland voters are relatively optimistic and doing OK," said Donna
Victoria, whose Takoma Park-based polling firm, Victoria Research, conducted the
survey from Nov. 9 to Nov. 14. "It's not the doom and gloom about the economy
that the mainstream media is promoting." The poll was broken into two parts,
testing the opinions of 813 likely 2024 general election voters of all political
persuasions, and 502 registered Baltimore City Democrats who are likely to vote
in the city's primaries next December. The statewide survey had a 3.3-point
margin of error, while the Baltimore Democratic portion of the survey had a
4.4-point error margin. The 45-question poll was paid for by the Annapolis
lobbying firm Perry White Ross and Jacobson, whose senior partner is Tim Perry,
a former chief of staff to the late Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr.
(D), and Blended Public Affairs, whose principal is Alexandra Hughes, a former
chief of staff to House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones (D-Baltimore County) and the
late Speaker Mike Busch (D). Both firms have an array of clients who will be
closely monitoring the developments in state government in the months ahead.
Perry White Ross and Jacobson is one of the top-grossing lobbying firms in the
state. In the poll, the basic sentiment from voters is that the state economy is
in good shape and that their own personal financial standing is also decent.
Asked to rate economic conditions in Maryland, 9% of the respondents in the
statewide survey answered excellent, while 42% said good, 36% said not so good,
11% said poor, and 2% weren't sure. Among Baltimore City Democrats, 5% said
excellent, 34% said good, 40% said not so good, 17% said poor, and 4% weren't
sure. Asked to assess their own financial situation "for the next year or so,"
32% of statewide voters said they were doing well, 17% said they were "doing
well and saving for things I want," 31% said they were living paycheck to
paycheck and 15% said they were struggling. Six percent said they weren't sure.
Among Baltimore City Democrats, 29% said they were doing well, 13% said they
were doing well and saving, 35% said they were living paycheck to paycheck, 16%
said they were struggling, and 7% said they weren't sure. Statewide voters said
fighting inflation should be policymakers' top priority, with fighting crime a
close second. Considerably farther down the priority list were, in order, health
care and prescription drug affordability, lower taxes, improving K-12 education,
attracting new jobs and economic growth, stronger gun bans, protect access to
abortion, better road and transit infrastructure, defending democracy and
fighting voter suppression, reducing climate change with green energy, and
Chesapeake Bay health. For Baltimore Democrats, crime was far and away the No. 1
issue, with education and stronger gun laws bunched together in second and third
place. Rounding out the list, in order: health care, transportation, new jobs,
inflation, abortion rights, voting rights, lower taxes, climate change and Bay
health. Victoria said it was apparent from the poll that voters are well aware
that they have "a new generation of leaders" and are looking to them to find
creative solutions to the state's challenges. Predictably, Maryland voters
believe they pay too much taxes — two-thirds of voters gave that answer in the
statewide survey, and just a tad less said the same in the Baltimore City poll.
But overall, voters seemed reasonably satisfied that they were getting a decent
value for the taxes they pay. Asked to grade the services and quality of life
they derive from state government for their tax dollar, 8% of statewide voters
gave an A grade, 28% said B, 34% said C, 16% said D, 11% said F, and 4% weren't
sure. Among Baltimore City Democrats, 4% gave an A grade, 24% said B, 34% said
C, 19% said D, 14% said F, and 5% weren't sure. "Nobody loves paying for
things," Victoria said. "But people have a sense that they have a pretty good
life here." <strong>Where the economic power lies</strong> Marylanders are also
taking a divergent view of where the economic power lies in the state. To the
question "Do you think that the Washington, D.C., region of Maryland or the
Baltimore region is the main driver of the economy for the state?" 53% of
statewide voters answered the D.C. region, 24% said the Baltimore region, and
23% weren't sure. Baltimore City Democrats were split into thirds on the
question. The pollster asked voters about several potential policy initiatives
or government investments that could boost the state economy and in all cases
found widespread support from Marylanders in both survey samples. The
initiatives were: <ul> <li>State investments to keep the Washington Commanders'
stadium in Maryland (70% of statewide voters approved)</li> <li>Policies that
encourage the construction of data centers in the state (74%)</li> <li>The
redevelopment of underused areas in Baltimore for multifamily housing (80%)</li>
<li>Construction of more affordable housing generally (78%)</li> <li>Expansion
of offshore wind energy (72%)</li> <li>A push for more biotech, cybersecurity
and health care facilities (84%)</li> <li>Establishment of a cyber hub near the
proposed new FBI headquarters in Greenbelt (72%)</li> <li>Taking advantage of
the state's laws protecting abortion rights and boosting education spending to
attract out-of-state businesses (76%)</li> <li>Promoting a newly revamped
Preakness Stakes and tying it to the state's historic horse racing industry
(66%)</li> <li>Doing a better job of promoting the state's natural resources and
history for tourism (80%)</li> <li>Allowing beer and wine sales in grocery
stores (76%)</li> <li>Creating a better mass transit system in the Baltimore
area (78%)</li> </ul> Beyond supporting these initiatives, survey respondents
overwhelmingly said they saw a statewide economic benefit to them. Asked about
two potential new revenue sources for state government, more than two-thirds of
voters said they supported Maryland joining half a dozen other states in
legalizing and taxing iGaming. More than half said they supported charging
out-of-state drivers more for Maryland tolls than in-state residents. "There was
a general receptivity to anything that could expand the business and economic
footprint of Maryland," Victoria said. On other issues likely to come before the
General Assembly in 2024: <ul> <li>58% of statewide voters, and 55% of Democrats
in Baltimore City, said they would support a bill to legalize medical
aid-in-dying.</li> <li>More than two-thirds of statewide voters, and more than
three-quarters of Baltimore Democrats, said they would support legislation that
would encourage greater housing density.</li> <li>59% of statewide voters, and
70% of Baltimore Democrats, support the state moving to "swiftly" regulate
artificial intelligence.</li> <li>70% of statewide voters, and 86% of Democrats
in Baltimore, said the state should do more to reduce disparities in the state,
especially as the U.S. Supreme Court chips away at diversity and equity
programs.</li> <li>Three-quarters of voters agreed that revitalization of
Harborplace in downtown Baltimore, and state investments in the Baltimore
Orioles and Baltimore Ravens stadiums are important to the city's success.</li>
</ul>