PRRI

The 2024 Presidential Battleground: Inside Michigan

In the 2020 presidential election, President Joe Biden won a slim majority of the votes in Michigan (50.6%), while former President Donald Trump won 47.8% of the state’s vote. Using data from PRRI’s 2023 American Values Atlas, this Spotlight Analysis presents a demographic and religious profile of Michiganders and the issues that are important to them and their voting choices ahead of the 2024 presidential election.

Michigan’s Religious Landscape

Three in ten Michiganders (30%) are religiously unaffiliated, representing the largest religious category in the state. Nearly two in ten Michiganders identify as either white mainline/non-evangelical Protestant (18%) or white Catholic (18%), which are higher rates than nationally for those groups (13% and 12%, respectively). Only 1% of Michiganders identify as Hispanic Catholic, compared with 8% of all Americans; the percentages of other religious groups in Michigan are similar to those of all Americans at large.

Michiganders Litmus Test Issues by Party Affiliation

Nearly four in ten Michiganders (39%) say they would only vote for a candidate who shares their views on abortion. Michigan Democrats (51%) and Republicans (42%) are more likely than independents (27%) to say they would only vote for a candidate who shares their stance on abortion.

One-third of Michiganders (32%) will only vote for a candidate who shares their views on access to guns. Nearly half of the state’s Republicans (46%), one-third of Democrats (33%), and nearly one in four independents (23%) say access to guns is a litmus test issue.

Three in ten Michigan residents (30%) would only vote for a candidate who shares their views on LGBTQ rights. Both Republicans (37%) and Democrats (35%) in the state are more likely than independents (22%) to base their vote on a candidate’s stance on LGBTQ rights.

One in four Michiganders (25%) consider immigration a litmus test issue when voting for a candidate. More than four in ten Michigan Republicans (42%) would only vote for a candidate who shares their views on immigration, compared with around two in ten Democrats (21%) and independents (20%).

Finally, one in four Michigan residents (25%) would only vote for a candidate who shares their views on climate change. Democrats in Michigan (38%) are more likely than Republicans (20%) and independents (19%) to only vote for a candidate based on their stance on climate change.

Attitudes Toward LGBTQ Rights in Michigan

Around three in four Michiganders (77%) favor laws that protect LGBTQ people against discrimination in jobs, public accommodations, and housing, while two in ten (19%) oppose these laws. The vast majority of both Democrats (95%) and independents (81%) in Michigan favor nondiscrimination laws, compared with 56% of Republicans.

The majority of Michigan residents (59%) oppose allowing a small business owner to refuse products or services to LGBTQ people, if doing so violates their religious beliefs, while 38% favor this. Michigan Republicans (30%) are less likely than Democrats (84%) and independents (53%) to oppose religiously based refusals.

Nearly seven in ten Michiganders (69%) favor allowing same-sex couples to marry legally, while 27% oppose. The vast majority of Democrats (85%) and around three in four independents (73%) favor same-sex marriage, compared with less than half of Michigan Republicans (46%).

Attitudes Toward Abortion in Michigan

Among the 2024 battleground states, Michigan has the least restrictive abortion laws, reflecting the overall opinions of the state’s residents. The majority of Michiganders (63%) say abortion should be legal in all or most cases, including around one-third of each who say abortion should be legal in all cases (32%) and legal in most cases (31%). One-third of Michigan residents (33%) say abortion should be illegal, including 26% who say it should be illegal in most cases and 7% who say it should be illegal in all cases.

Nearly nine in ten Michigan Democrats (89%) and around seven in ten independents (71%) say abortion should be legal in all or most cases, compared with only 28% of Republicans in the state.


Explore the 2024 battleground states in additional PRRI Spotlight Analyses:

Learn more about each battleground state’s demographics and litmus test issues:

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