Poll: Michigan voters skeptical of electric vehicle transition

Michigan voters are split on the auto industry’s transition to electric vehicles, according to statewide survey results released Thursday by the Detroit Regional Chamber and polling firm Glengariff Group.

Around 46% of likely Michigan voters support the industry’s shift, while around 44% oppose it. A third of overall respondents said they “strongly oppose” the change.

Ford employees assemble the Ford F-150 Lightning at the Ford Rouge Electric Vehicle Center. A survey of Michigan voters shows a sharp divide on acceptance of the industry's transition to battery-powered vehicles.

The global auto industry is in the midst of transitioning from producing gas and diesel-powered vehicles to electric ones. They’re pouring billions of dollars into new facilities to build EVs and the batteries that support them, and forming new alliances to source critical minerals for those batteries.

But in Michigan, the center of the U.S. automotive industry, voters are skeptical that is the right move. Those who said they oppose the shift said they were worried the electric grid can’t support EVs, that they’re too expensive, and that the U.S. doesn’t have the infrastructure to support them. However, 58% said they would support public investment in EV chargers.

The poll of 600 people was conducted from Feb. 10-13 and has a margin of error of 4%. One quarter of the respondents were reached via landline and three quarters were reached via cellphone.

Opinions differed sharply along party lines, with Democrats largely supporting the shift and Republicans largely opposing it, while independent voters supported the shift 48-40%. Metro Detroiters supported the shift by 20 percentage points while outstate voters opposed it by around 10 percentage points.

Sandy Baruah, president and CEO of the Detroit Regional Chamber, said it’s clear that the global auto market is shifting to EVs, and it’s crucial for Michigan to be able to retain its footing as a leader in the industry.

“We’re not going to be able to compete and win in the global vehicle market in the future being very predominantly electrified if we don’t have alignment between what our companies are doing, what our government is supporting, and what our public is willing to support as well,” Baruah said. “And right now we’re not there yet, so we have more education to do.”