|
THAD BEYLE
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
RICHARD G. NIEMI
University of Rochester
LEE SIGELMAN
The George Washington University
Gubernatorial, Senatorial, and State-level Presidential
Job Approval: The U.S. Officials Job Approval Ratings (JAR) Collection
Job approval ratings for state governors, unlike those
for the United States president, have been relatively inaccessible to
political scientists. We introduce the U.S. Officials Job Approval Ratings
(JAR) dataset, a new compilation of gubernatorial job approval ratingsalong
with senatorial and state-level presidential ratingsthat draws together
many of these ratings, beginning with the first published rating in 1947
and extending through 2000. We describe some of the characteristics of
these data, especially the kinds of rating scales used and their impact
on overall approval assessment. We then show that 19932000 presidential
approval levels varied widely from state to state and are correlated with
state-level support for Clinton in the 1996 presidential election. Finally,
we note that while gubernatorial approval often declines over time, many
governors remain popular over the length of their term.
|
|