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Public Calls for Menendez Resignation

New Jersey

Bipartisan opinion much more negative than earlier corruption case

West Long Branch, NJ – Public opinion of Sen. Bob Menendez has plummeted since he was charged in a second corruption case in less than ten years. The Monmouth (“Mon-muth”) University Poll finds a clear majority of New Jersey residents want him to resign now – including most of his fellow Democrats – which is a reversal of opinion from the last time he was under federal indictment.

Just 16% of Garden State voters approve of the job Menendez is doing while 3 in 4 (74%) disapprove. This is his record low rating – by far – in Monmouth polling going back to 2008. The last time Menendez faced federal corruption charges, he held a much better job rating of 42% approve and 38% disapprove (May 2015). Those charges were dismissed and Menendez went on to win reelection in 2018. His job rating generally held steady during this time, but it dropped in September 2019 to what was then a career low of 37% favorable and 45% unfavorable. Those numbers quickly rebounded and Menendez held a net positive rating as recently as two years ago (44% favorable and 39% unfavorable in April 2022). His job rating moved to an even split last year (38% approve and 38% disapprove in January 2023) and dropped into negative territory in August of last year (36% approve and 45% disapprove) as news of another federal investigation emerged.

Graph of Senator Menendez job rating. Refer to question 6 for details

Since his first indictment, Menendez’s approval rating among his fellow Democrats ranged from just under half (47% in 2015) to a high of 72% (2021). That is no longer the case. Menendez gets just 23% approval from Democrats. Nearly 2 in 3 (65%) now disapprove of his performance, joining large majorities of Republicans (82%) and independents (77%) who feel the same.

Chart titled New Jersey opinion of Menendez legal troubles. Refer to questions 7, 8, and 9 for details.

“Throughout his prior legal ordeal, Menendez could at least count on the backing of most of his fellow Democrats. That support has now cratered and is unlikely to recover since the charges keep piling up,” said Patrick Murray, director of the independent Monmouth University Polling Institute. [Note: The poll was conducted before additional charges against Menendez were announced on Tuesday.]

In 2015, just 28% of New Jerseyans called for Menendez’s immediate resignation from the U.S. Senate because of the criminal charges he then faced. In fact, a clear majority (68%) – including most Republicans (65%) – were willing to give him the opportunity to clear his name even though many (47%) believed he was probably guilty at the time. That sentiment doesn’t hold for the present indictment. Currently, 75% of state residents believe Menendez is probably guilty of the current charges and 63% say he should resign now – including 59% of Democrats who want him to step down.

 “Perhaps the stash of gold bars is a little too much to stomach. Or maybe it’s simply one corruption trial too many. In any event, New Jerseyans say they have had enough and it’s time for Menendez to go,” said Murray.

The poll also finds that New Jersey’s other U.S. Senator, Cory Booker, has a 53% approve and 40% disapprove rating among the state’s electorate. Registered voter opinion of President Joe Biden’s job performance stands at a net negative 44% approve and 53% disapprove. In both cases, these results represent slight improvements from Monmouth’s prior New Jersey poll taken last August.

Graph of Senator Booker job rating. Refer to question 5 for details.

The Monmouth University Poll was conducted by telephone from February 29 to  March 4, 2024 with 801 New Jersey adults. The question results in this release have a margin of error of +/- 4.2 percentage points for the full sample. The poll was conducted by the Monmouth University Polling Institute in West Long Branch, NJ.

QUESTIONS AND RESULTS     

(* Some columns may not add to 100% due to rounding.)

[Q1-3 held for future release.]

4.Do you approve or disapprove of the job Joe Biden is doing as president?

All adultsMarch
2024
Approve43%
Disapprove54%
(VOL) No opinion2%
   (n)(801)
Trend: Registered votersMarch
2024
Aug.
2023
Jan.
2023
April
2022
Oct.
2021
Aug.
2021
May
2021
Approve44%41%46%47%43%51%55%
Disapprove53%52%48%49%49%41%40%
(VOL) No opinion2%6%6%4%8%9%5%
   (n)(757)(778)(756)(738)(1,000)(810)(661)

[QUESTIONS 5 & 6 WERE ROTATED]

5.Do you approve or disapprove of the job Cory Booker is doing as United States Senator?

All adultsMarch
2024
Approve52%
Disapprove40%
(VOL) No opinion8%
   (n)(801)
Trend: Registered votersMarch
2024
Aug.
2023
Jan.
2023
April
2022
Sept.
2021
May
2021
April
2020
Sept.
2019
Feb.
2019
Approve53%47%52%55%51%57%51%45%48%
Disapprove40%40%33%33%32%36%34%40%38%
(VOL) No opinion7%13%15%12%17%6%14%16%14%
   (n)(757)(778)(756)(738)(804)(661)(635)(651)(549)
Trend: Registered voters
continued
April
2018
July
2017
May
2016
July
2015
May
2015
Feb.
2015
Sept.
2014
June
2014
April
2014
Feb.
2014
Dec.
2013
Approve54%50%53%45%51%51%42%48%47%47%37%
Disapprove31%31%21%24%21%21%23%25%23%20%21%
(VOL) No opinion15%20%27%31%27%27%35%27%30%32%43%
   (n)(632)(758)(703)(453)(441)(712)(680)(717)(690)(690)(698)

6.Do you approve or disapprove of the job Bob Menendez is doing as United States Senator?

All adultsMarch
2024
Approve16%
Disapprove74%
(VOL) No opinion10%
   (n)(801)
Trend: Registered votersMarch
2024
Aug.
2023
Jan.
2023
April
2022
Sept.
2021
May
2021
April
2020
Sept.
2019
Feb.
2019
 Approve16%36%38%44%43%46%44%37%40%
Disapprove74%45%38%39%35%38%38%45%45%
(VOL) No opinion10%19%24%17%22%16%18%18%15%
   (n)(757)(778)(756)(738)(804)(661)(635)(651)(549)
Trend: Registered voters
continued
April
2018
July
2017
May
2016
July
2015
May
2015
Feb.
2015
Sept.
2014
June
2014
April
2014
Feb.
2014
Dec.
2013
April
2013
Feb.
2013
Approve37%41%41%38%42%49%45%47%51%49%47%44%41%
Disapprove38%35%31%38%38%27%30%34%31%30%27%38%31%
(VOL) No opinion25%23%28%23%20%24%26%19%18%21%26%18%28%
   (n)(632)(758)(703)(453)(441)(712)(680)(717)(690)(690)(698)(694)(697)
Trend: Registered voters
continued
April
2012
Feb.
2012
Oct.
2011
Aug.
2011
May
2011
July
2010
Oct.
2008
April
2008
Jan.
2008
Approve40%41%43%38%46%38%34%41%37%
Disapprove25%26%29%33%28%33%25%31%25%
(VOL) No opinion35%33%28%29%26%29%41%28%37%
   (n)(692)(709)(693)(730)(725)(747)(900)(720)(698)

7.Senator Menendez was recently charged with accepting bribes and acting as a foreign agent. Have you heard a lot, a little, or nothing at all about this?

Comparison:March
2024
May
2015*
A lot54%41%
A little35%38%
Nothing at all  11%21%
   (n)(801)(500)
* Asked about the 2015 charges against Menendez for “bribery and misusing his public office by providing assistance to someone who gave him donations and gifts as well as not reporting these gifts at the time.”

8.Based on what you have heard, do you think Menendez is probably guilty or probably not guilty of these charges?

Comparison:March
2024
May
2015*
Probably guilty75%47%
Probably not guilty5%19%
(VOL) Don’t know9%13%
Not heard (from Q7)11%21%
   (n)(801)(500)
* Asked about the 2015 charges against Menendez.

9.As a New Jersey resident, do you think Senator Menendez should resign from office now or should he be allowed to wait and see how the charges against him are settled?

Comparison:March
2024
May
2015*
Resign now63%28%
Allowed to wait33%68%
(VOL) Don’t know4%4%
   (n)(801)(500)
* Asked about the 2015 charges against Menendez.

[Q10-13 previously released.]

[Q14-42 held for future release.]

METHODOLOGY

The Monmouth University Poll was sponsored and conducted by the Monmouth University Polling Institute from February 29 to March 4, 2024 with a probability-based random sample of 801 New Jersey adults age 18 and older. Interviews were conducted in English, and included 259 live landline telephone interviews, 375 live cell phone interviews, and 167 online surveys via a cell phone text invitation. Telephone numbers were selected through a mix of random digit dialing and list-based sampling. Landline respondents were selected with a modified Troldahl-Carter youngest adult household screen. Interviewing services were provided by Braun Research, with sample obtained from Dynata (RDD, n= 657) and Aristotle (list, n= 144). Monmouth is responsible for all aspects of the survey design, data weighting and analysis. The full sample is weighted for region, age, education, gender and race based on US Census information (ACS 2021 one-year survey. For results based on this sample, one can say with 95% confidence that the error attributable to sampling has a maximum margin of plus or minus 4.2 percentage points adjusted for sample design effects (1.49). Sampling error can be larger for sub-groups (see table below). In addition to sampling error, one should bear in mind that question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of opinion polls.

NJ Regions (by county)

North – Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Morris, Passaic, Sussex, Union, Warren

Central – Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Somerset

South – Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Ocean, Salem

Demographics (weighted)

Party (self-reported): 26% Republican, 37% Independent, 37% Democrat

Sex: 49% male, 51% female, 1% other

Age: 28% 18-34, 33% 35-54, 39% 55+

Race: 55% White, 13% Black, 19% Hispanic, 13% Asian/other

Education: 34% high school or less, 25% some college, 23% 4 year degree, 18% graduate degree

Click on pdf file link below for full methodology and crosstabs by key demographic groups.