Gov. leads his Democratic challenger by 5 percentage points, according to a new poll from the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas at Austin.
The survey found that Abbott received 45% of support among registered voters, while 40% supported O鈥橰ourke and 4% supported third-party candidates. Three percent of respondents named 鈥淪omeone else鈥 as their choice, and 8% said they have not thought about the race enough to have an opinion.
The result is almost identical to the margin from when the pollsters last surveyed the race in June, finding Abbott ahead of O鈥橰ourke 45% to 39%.
The latest survey also gave Republican incumbents single-digit leads in two other statewide races. Lt. Gov. led Democrat Mike Collier by 7 points, and Attorney General registered a 5-point advantage over Democrat Rochelle Garza. More voters remain undecided in those contests than in the gubernatorial election 鈥 20% in the lieutenant governor鈥檚 race and 21% in the attorney general one.
Abbott is seeking a third term against O鈥橰ourke, the former El Paso congressman who had a near-miss loss to U.S. Sen. in 2018. Forty-six percent of respondents approve of the job Abbott is doing while 44% disapprove, according to the poll. It marks an improvement over the June poll, when Abbott鈥檚 approval rating was upside down, with 43% approving and 46% disapproving.
When it comes to issues, the poll showed voters continue to prioritize the border. 鈥淚mmigration/border security鈥 led the list of issues that voters said were most most important to their vote in the election, with 26% choosing it. It was followed by the state economy (13%), abortion (12%) and gun violence (11%).
Voters said they trusted Abbott more on the border and economy and O鈥橰ourke more on abortion. They were equally divided on who had the advantage on gun violence.
O鈥橰ourke has campaigned heavily against Abbott on abortion, highlighting that Abbott signed the 鈥溾 that has banned almost all abortions in Texas following the U.S. Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade. Voters registered clear disapproval with the post-Roe landscape in Texas, with 50% saying they support 鈥渆xpand[ing] legal access to abortion services鈥 in the state now versus 31% who disapproved of that idea. And by a nearly 2-to-1 margin, voters said the state should not dedicate more resources to enforcing its abortion ban.
O鈥橰ourke has also been highly critical of Abbott鈥檚 refusal to support any new gun restrictions following the Uvalde school shooting. The poll found voters continue to want stricter gun laws, with 54% saying they should be more strict and 23% saying they should be left as is.
Abbott鈥檚 biggest advantage remains the border. By a 12-point margin, voters said they trusted him to do a better job on 鈥渋mmigration/border security鈥 than O鈥橰ourke. And 51% said they support Abbott鈥檚 program to to other parts of the country that has captured headlines recently. Thirty-five percent opposed the initiative.
President Joe Biden remains unpopular in Texas, though not as much as he was earlier in the summer. The latest poll found Biden has a net approval rating of negative 12 points in Texas, a figure that was negative 20 in June.
The poll of 1,200 registered voters was conducted online from Aug. 28 to Sept. 6. The margin of error was +/- 2.83 points.
Disclosure: The University of Texas at Austin has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune鈥檚 journalism. Find a complete .
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