We have to be careful and make a distinction between data and theory. First of all, as you can imagine from the name itself, a Black Hole (BH) is very hard to spot. It is even harder to measure its possible angular momentum (or charge, the quantities that, with the mass, characterize a classical BH). If we see evidences of a huge mass in a region of the sky, our General Relativity theory tells us that it has to be a BH. So there is a continuous exchange between model and data.
If we stick to pure data, at the best of my knowledge, we have no direct measure of the angular velocity of the internal black hole. At most, in almost all the cases, we can measure the speed of its accretion disk.
Near-future experimental data
However, we can say something more in the particular case of Sagittarius A*. A particular case because it is a super-massive object lying at the center of our galaxy (so relatively close to us).
In this case, hopefully soon, will be possible to test the angular momentum of the object via the "shadow" that a Kerr-metric solution predicts. In fact, a new instrument to study these BH features called Event Horizon Telescope is beginning to give results.
So, Sagittarius A* is the best of our knowledge regarding BHs at the center of galaxies. Probably, what we don't understand here, we cannot understand somewhere else. You can find more information on a review by Tim Johannsen appeared in ArXiv today 1512.03818 (you can see how much of these is current research topic!! ).
Galaxy-BH interaction
Now, coming back to your questions,
What is the relationship between the spin of a galaxy and the spin of its corresponding black hole?
Experimentally, we don't know yet. Theoretically, it strongly depends on how the BHs born. There are many models of formation, I'm not an expert on supermassive BHs formation, and this is still an open question, it would be nice if somebody could fill this gap with some references on comments or another answer. Avoiding to fall into the "Chicken or the egg" dilemma, I can say that a BH is surrounded by its accretion disk, that in most of the cases spins. Once matter falls into the BH it will acquire angular momentum. The only way it could have some crazy (unrelated with the matter falling into) angular momentum it would be if some very strange and violent formation process occurred.
Do they always have the same axis of rotation?
Do they always spin in the same direction?
Does galaxy angular momentum increase due to frame dragging from black hole, causing continuing increase in galaxy angular velocity?
Frame Dragging
Obviously, frame dragging (FD) plays a role. But we cannot forget that all the matter drags spacetime. Even if the BH would spin in some crazy way, or stay fixed, its effect on the far stars it can be calculated negligible (I heard this, never tried the math thought). But, you can see its impact in the orbits of stars close to the BH (see 1512.03818).
Hawking radiation
Finally, your last question
How does Hawking radiation impact rotational coupling?
Hawking radiation is mostly a theoretical object, in astrophysics, it doesn't play any particular role. Especially, for those BH that are super-massive!!
Following Wikipedia,
$$T_h = {\hbar \, c^3 \over 8 \pi G M k_\text{B}} \;\quad \left(\approx {1.227 \times 10^{23}\; \text{kg} \over M}\; \text{K} = 6.169 \times 10^{-8}\; \text{K} \times {\text{M}_\odot \over M} \right)$$
e.g. the mass of Saggittarius A* is measured to be around $4\times 10^6 \text{M}_\odot $ getting an overall $T_{H}^{\text{Sag}} \sim 10^{-14} K$, this BH is in a thermal reservoir with temperature $T_{CMB}=2.7K$, so the black-body radiation of the Cosmic Microwave Background makes the Hawking radiation completely negligible. Remember that the Stefan–Boltzmann law tells you that the intensity of the radiation scale like $T^4$.
You can see this related question to check how much the angular momentum does not change the game.