Wisconsin Republican gubernatorial candidate Tim Michels is in a virtual tie with Gov. Tony Evers (D), according to a poll released Wednesday.
Michels has closed the gap with Evers, according to a Marquette Law School poll. Among likely voters, 47 percent support Evers, and 46 percent support Michels. This shows the race has tightened, as Evers had 47 percent and Michels had 44 percent in the September Marquette poll.
Among voters that are “absolutely certain” to vote, Evers leads 47 percent to Michels’ 46 percent as well.
Evers has an approval rating of 44 percent, while 46 percent have an unfavorable view of the Democrat governor; 36 percent are favorable of Michels, and 36 percent are unfavorable towards the Republican gubernatorial candidate.
The Wisconsin Democrat governor has a net disapproval of his job performance: 48 percent disapprove of his job as governor and 46 percent approve.
Wisconsinites say inflation, public schools, and gun violence are the top three issues they are “very concerned” about.
The poll was conducted before Evers said during a press conference on Tuesday that the 2020 Kenosha Black Lives Matters riots were “civil disruptions.”
Michels said in reaction to Evers’ comment, “Two years later, Tony Evers still refuses to acknowledge his failure in Kenosha. Today, he even minimized the riots by calling them a “civil disruption.” It’s a slap in the face to those who watched their city burn. Evers’ tired, old leadership failed them, and his time is up.”
Marquette Law School interviewed 801 registered Wisconsin voters by landline or cell phone between October 3 and 9. The survey has a +/- 4.3 percent margin of error. The margin of error for the 652 likely voters is +/- 4.8 percent.
Sean Moran is a congressional reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter @SeanMoran3.