Gov. Phil Murphy delivers his final state of the state address in Trenton on Jan. 13, 2026. - PROVIDED BY RICH HUNDLEY III/NJ GOVERNOR'S OFFICE
Gov. Phil Murphy delivers his final state of the state address in Trenton on Jan. 13, 2026. - PROVIDED BY RICH HUNDLEY III/NJ GOVERNOR'S OFFICE
Matthew Fazelpoor//January 15, 2026//
Gov. Phil Murphy’s time in office is rapidly coming to a close, and a new poll out Jan. 15 from Rutgers-Eagleton reveals the governor’s report card from New Jerseyans.
Residents gave Murphy a “C” for his overall performance over the last eight years.
The poll asked residents to grade the Democratic governor using a standard A-to-F scale (4 points for A to 0 points for F). Overall, he earned a 2.09 grade-point average, with:
His weakest marks came on two issues most often cited as top concerns – affordability (1.32 GPA) and taxes (1.44 GPA), with voters giving him a D+ on each. Notably on those two issues, 3 in 10 respondents gave him an F.
According to the poll, Murphy exits with steady, middle-of-the-road favorability and approval ratings. Respondents were also evenly divided over whether the state is headed in the right direction. That includes:

“Gov. Murphy will leave office much as he entered it – a governor who rarely elicited strong reactions and generally avoided sharp swings in public opinion,” said Ashley Koning, assistant research professor and director of the Eagleton Center for Public Interest Polling at Rutgers University–New Brunswick. “Murphy exits with the steadiest ratings of any governor in our five decades of polling. He received neither the highest nor lowest ratings of any governor on record, in sharp contrast to his immediate predecessor.”
Murphy also earned mostly C-range grades on other fiscal measures the poll asked residents to grade him on, including the economy and jobs (1.98 GPA) and the state budget and government spending (1.79 GPA).

“Murphy’s grades on key fiscal issues have remained largely unchanged from his first to second term, suggesting New Jerseyans saw little progress in these critical areas,” said Koning. “Addressing these same challenges will be among Gov.-elect [Mikie] Sherrill’s most important tasks as she takes office next week.”
Other key survey findings include:
The results are based on a statewide poll of 1,570 New Jersey adults contacted through the Rutgers-Eagleton/SSRS Garden State Panel from Dec. 29, 2025, to Jan. 6, 2026. The margin of error is +/- 3.6%.
The full poll results can be found here.