Republican lawmakers in battleground state Wisconsin want to change state law to allow candidates to remove their names from the ballot.
Republican legislators in Wisconsin have proposed a bill allowing candidates to withdraw their names from election ballots, following an incident involving Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Kennedy attempted to rescind his name from the presidential ballot in Wisconsin and six other swing states after ending his independent campaign in August and endorsing
Wisconsin's next election is Feb. 18, when voters will narrow down candidates for state superintendent and some local, nonpartisan offices.
In a few months, voters in the state will decide who the new state Supreme Court justice will be, and ahead of that election the two are campaigning across the state. On the campaign trail for the Wisconsin Supreme Court, judge Susan Crawford and Judge Brad Schimel speaking with voters on their priorities if elected.
Candidates Brad Schimel and Susan Crawford both are drawing financial support from partisans in the state's April 1 Supreme Court race.
We survived the 2024 election in true Wisconsin fashion: voter turnout at 73% with 3.4 million people casting ballot, the most in a statewide election in history. And for the second election ...
The claim is false. Only five of the seven swing states had senate races in 2024, and not all of them were won by Democratic candidates.
Wisconsin requires proof of ID to vote. Federally licensed gun dealers are required to do background checks, but other gun sellers are not.
A proposed state constitutional amendment requiring a photo ID to vote in Wisconsin elections is expected to receive final legislative approval as early as Tuesday. That would put the issue before voters on the April election ballot, following the Legislature also passing the proposed amendment during the previous legislative session.
Wisconsin’s photo ID requirement for voting would be elevated from a state law to a constitutional amendment under a proposal approved in the Republican-controlled Assembly with no support from Democrats.
Wisconsinites will vote this spring on whether to enshrine the state's voter ID law into the state constitution, a move that would make it more difficult for the Wisconsin Supreme Court to overturn or loosen the state's law requiring a photo ID to vote.
For the first time in nearly two decades, the Wisconsin Senate doesn’t have a dedicated election committee — at least, not in name — even though Democrats and Republicans have multiple legislative priorities for election administration in the coming legislative session.