Wisconsin's next election is Feb. 18, when voters will narrow down candidates for state superintendent and some local, nonpartisan offices.
We can undercut the arguments made by election deniers with simple fixes. Republicans and Democrats should be in support of cleaning up our process
The Wisconsin Supreme Court has rejected an attempt by a conservative activist to obtain guardianship records in an effort to find ineligible voters.
The Wisconsin state legislature passed a proposal that could enshrine voter ID requirements in the state constitution if Wisconsin voters support it at the ballot box in April. The proposal passed 54 to 45 along party lines in the state Assembly,
Wisconsin requires proof of ID to vote. Federally licensed gun dealers are required to do background checks, but other gun sellers are not.
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.
Candidates Brad Schimel and Susan Crawford both are drawing financial support from partisans in the state's April 1 Supreme Court race.
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.
If individual campaign donations are any indication, the April 1 race for a seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court is already promising to draw massive amounts of spending as majority control of the state’s highest court is once again on the line.
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.
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.
Election season is finally over. Past the haze of presidential results was a significant shakeup of new faces in Wisconsin's State Legislature, made possible after the adoption of new district maps earlier this year. While touted as fair, will these new ...