Although just one seat will be decided in Wisconsin’s Supreme Court election this spring, the race is already forming into one of the most expensive and divisive contests of the year, with control of the seven-member court and the future of a 19th-century abortion ban on the line.
In the early months of Donald Trump’s presidency, the contest between conservative candidate Waukesha County Circuit Judge Brad Schimel and liberal candidate Susan Crawford of Dane County serves as a litmus test for how voters in a pivotal swing state perceive Republican and Democratic politics.
And it emphasises how the judiciary plays a crucial role in resolving the contentious issues that sharply divide Americans, from union protections for public sector employees to the future of abortion in the post-Dobbs era.
According to the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign, the election is anticipated to cost more than the $51 million spent on the previous Badger State Supreme Court contest. National spending records for a judicial election were broken in the 2023 contest.
Despite being ostensibly nonpartisan, political players from both parties are vying for influence in the Wisconsin judicial election scheduled on April 1. Billionaires like Republican-leaning roofing tycoon Diane Hendricks and leftist financier George Soros have contributed significantly to the state Democratic and Republican parties, respectively.
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