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Poll: Hogan remains popular in Maryland, support for marijuana legalization dips

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With the Maryland General Assembly poised to consider legalizing the recreational use of marijuana next year, support for the reform has decreased slightly among Maryland residents, according to one poll.

About 60% of Marylanders support legalization, according to the聽聽released early Tuesday morning. That鈥檚 slightly down from the last time the poll asked the question in March, when 67% of residents supported legalization.

In the most recent poll, which has a margin of error of 3.7 percentage points and was conducted between Oct. 14 and Oct. 20, about 48% of registered Republican voters and 65% of registered Democrats approved of legalization.

When the question was聽, a bare majority of Republicans polled 鈥 50% 鈥 supported legalization for the first time.

The General Assembly could decide during the 2022 legislative session to send the question of legalization to the ballot. House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones (D-Baltimore County) has said she would聽聽on the issue and convened a workgroup to envision how a legal cannabis industry would operate in the state. Senate President Bill Ferguson (D-Baltimore City) has said the General Assembly should move forward with reform in 2022 without delay.

Support for legalization was strongest among white residents, 66%, compared to 53% among all other races.

The poll asked residents their views on a wide range of issues, including on abortion, the direction of the state and Maryland鈥檚 economic outlook, as well as the favorability of statewide elected officials and President Biden.

Lawmakers鈥 approval ratings

Gov. Lawrence J. Hogan Jr. (R) remained popular, with 68% of Marylanders approving of the job Hogan is doing as governor. Twenty-two percent disapproved.

The governor鈥檚 approval was up slightly from his 65% rate at the last Goucher Poll in March.

Despite outcries from conservatives who decried Hogan鈥檚 earlier strict COVID interventions, he had a relatively steady approval rating across ideology: 69% approval from Democrats, 66% from Republicans and 64% among unaffiliated voters.

The approval ratings of President Biden, on the other hand, showed a stark ideological gulf: an 80% approval rating among Democrats, compared to 8% among Republicans. About 43% of unaffiliated registered voters approved of Biden鈥檚 performance.

Overall, 53% of Marylanders approved of the way Biden is handling his job as president. That鈥檚 down from 62% last spring.

U.S. Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D), who is up for reelection in 2022, tallied an approval rating of 44%. Twenty-six percent of residents disapproved and 29% said they didn鈥檛 know.

Senior U.S. Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin (D) had an approval rating of 46%.

State鈥檚 direction and economic condition

Fifty-nine percent of those polled said Maryland is heading in the right direction, and 31% said the state is on the wrong track. More Marylanders in the D.C. suburbs 鈥 73% 鈥 said the state was headed in the right direction, than other regions, where 52% of respondents agreed.

A majority of Marylanders, 53%, hold a mostly positive view of the Maryland economy, while 37% hold a mostly negative view. Sixty-two percent of Democrats had a mostly positive view of the economy, compared to 36% of Republicans. Sixty-five percent of residents with a college degree viewed the economy favorably, compared to 45% without a college degree.

Abortion

Most Marylanders, 88%, want to keep abortion legal. But they are equally divided on whether that means legal in all cases (44%) or only under certain circumstances (44%).

Fifty-seven percent of Democrats said abortion should be legal under any circumstance, compared to 16% of Republicans.

Seventeen percent of Republicans said abortion should be illegal in all circumstances, compared to 7% of Democrats.

State parks

As state officials sharpen their focus on maintaining Maryland鈥檚 parkland 鈥 legislators have聽聽to analyze the park system鈥檚 needs, while Hogan has聽聽鈥 demand for state parks is expected to remain high.

Eighty-four percent of those polled said they were interested in visiting a state park within the next year.

And despite聽聽on the park system, a majority of residents, 59%, said they believed state parks are funded at the 鈥渞ight amount.鈥 Twenty-seven percent of those polled said state parks receive too little funding; 6% said park funding was too high.

鈥淭here is a pretty clear disconnect鈥 on the issue of park funding, said Mileah Kromer, director of the Sarah T. Hughes Center for Politics at Goucher College.

In other funding areas, 54% of those polled said public education receives too little; 47% said roads and highways receive too little, compared to 40% who thought public transportation should get more funding; and 47% said housing and community development gets too little funding.

Northern or southern?

Continuing a trend, the poll also included a question of popular opinion on a nonpolitical topic.

When asked if Maryland is more of a northern state or a southern state, 65% of Marylanders say it鈥檚 more of a northern state, while 27% say it鈥檚 more of a southern state.

The poll is set to release additional results on Wednesday.

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