Russ Feingold (left) and Ron Johnson
The good news for Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson is that Marquette no longer has him down 16 points in his battle for re-election against Democrat Russ Feingold. The bad news is that
the Republican still trails by a 47-42 margin, which, suffice it to say, is not where an incumbent wants to find himself. It's not clear why the gap would have closed so much—this early in the campaign, there really isn't any good reason for polls to shift like this—but even so, the rest of Marquette's findings aren't very helpful for Johnson, either.
For one, Feingold remains more popular, with a 42-30 favorability rating, compared to 30-31 for Johnson. For another, Hillary Clinton is doing well, beating Jeb Bush 47-42 and Scott Walker 52-42. (As an aside, it's amazing that Walker performs worse than Jeb.) If Clinton were to carry Wisconsin, as you'd expect, then Johnson would need a lot of her supporters to not vote a straight ticket and instead support him over Feingold. But in 2012, Republican ex-Gov. Tommy Thompson only performed about 1.5 net points better than Mitt Romney in that year's Senate race, and Thompson had a much more moderate profile than Johnson.
And it's even possible that Marquette's new numbers are actually too optimistic for RoJo. A conservative group called Restoration PAC recently released internal polling that had Feingold ahead 50-42. If that's the best that Republicans can come up with, well, that's not very good. (Restoration tried to argue that their recent round of TV ads, the size of which they did not disclose, had improved Johnson's standing. They should have just waited for Marquette!)
Marquette has a good reputation for accuracy, but again, this is a lot of movement, so let's see what other pollsters say. Either way, though, Johnson is still in trouble.