Kasich's job approval (the first tested by PPP) is a truly miserable 35-54. PPP also posed a question on SB5, a bill which would institute "right-to-work" in the state of Ohio. This legislation, once law, would almost certainly go before the voters in the form of a ballot question, probably this November. It's definitely helping to drag Kasich down:
Q: If Senate Bill 5, which would limit collective bargaining rights for public employees, passes the legislature and is signed by the Governor there may be a statewide vote this fall on repealing the bill. Would you vote to repeal Senate Bill 5 or would you vote to let the law stand, or are you not sure?
Would vote to repeal SB5: 54
Would vote to let the law stand: 31
Not sure: 15
(MoE: ±4.1%)
Of course the reality is that Democratic leaning voters did this to themselves to some extent. It's a small sample but among those who admit they didn't vote last fall, Strickland has a 57-13 advantage over Kaisch. It was a similar story in Wisconsin the other week where Tom Barrett led Scott Walker 59-22 among those who had stayed at home in 2010. Democratic voters simply did not understand the consequences - or didn't care - of their not voting last fall and they're paying the price right now. But the winners of that realization in the long run may be Barack Obama, Sherrod Brown, and Herb Kohl - these states are already looking politically a whole lot more like 2008 than 2010.