By
Eli Yokley
January 12, 2023 at 5:00 am ET
Public sentiment in Kentucky about Gov. Andy Beshear remains overwhelmingly positive as the Democrat prepares to defend his seat this year, placing him again among the nation’s 10 most popular governors, according to Morning Consult Political Intelligence tracking surveys.
Positive perceptions of job performance do not always ensure victory. While Kelly defeated her Republican challenger in November, Democratic Gov. Steve Sisolak of Nevada narrowly lost his re-election bid despite maintaining an approval rating of at least 50% in the third and fourth quarters of 2022.
In Kentucky, Beshear indeed faces an uphill battle in a state that, despite its history of Democratic governors, has voted overwhelmingly Republican in federal races over the past two decades. He flipped the seat in 2019 thanks in large part to former Republican Gov. Matt Bevin’s unpopularity, an advantage he will not likely have this fall as he faces a slate of potential Republican challengers, including state Attorney General Daniel Cameron, former U.S. ambassador to Canada and the United Nations Kelly Craft and Agricultural Commissioner Ryan Quarles.
Still, the incumbent’s appeal to non-Democrats is welcome news and a legitimate upside for a party seeking to maintain possession of two of the three governor’s mansions that are up for grabs this fall.
Looking across the map, Beshear and Democratic Gov. Ned Lamont of Connecticut are clear outliers, as most of the country’s most popular governors in late 2022 were Republicans.
For Morning Consult’s state-level survey data, weights are applied to each state separately based on age, gender, education, race, home ownership, marital status, presidential voting history and — for a subset of states — race by education as well as an age-by-gender interaction.
Margins of error for responses from all voters in each state range from 1 to 5 points. For more detailed information, you can download the 50-state data set for gubernatorial approval ratings among all voters here.