The first poll of Republican Governor Rick Snyder’s approval rating since he signed Michigan’s controversial “right-to-work” legislation shows a sharp drop in confidence among the state’s electorate. According to the Democratic firm Public Policy Polling, Gov. Snyder’s approval rating now rests at 38%—a 28 point drop from his approval in PPP’s last poll, taken in early November.
Furthermore, “Republicans in the legislature are even more unpopular than Snyder after their spate of last minute legislation” during the 2012 lame duck session, according to a PPP statement. The lame duck Republican caucus holds a current approval rating of 31%.
“There’s not much doubt that it’s the right-to-work law and his embrace of other actions by the Republican legislature that are driving this precipitous drop in Snyder’s popularity,” wrote PPP’s Tom Jensen.
Over the past two years, the Republican-controlled Michigan legislature has passed a bevy of hard-right laws, including three right-to-work bills and stringent limitations on reproductive rights. Gov. Snyder—who ran for office as a moderate and has previously opposed right-to-work—signed the laws.









