
M.D. Kittle: Poll: Voters say Wisconsin still heading in wrong direction
Wisconsinites remain sour on the direction of a state led by Gov. Tony Evers, according to the latest University of Marquette Law School poll.
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Wisconsinites remain sour on the direction of a state led by Gov. Tony Evers, according to the latest University of Marquette Law School poll.
Michels and Kleefisch are tied. What’s interesting is where Michels’ support so far has come from.
The story in Wisconsin and nationally could not have been clearer.
Today, no actual conservative party policy idea can surface as the saturation of crazy has dominated every aspect of the GOP.
If you think otherwise, it means your own friends and neighbors are the “corrupt bureaucrats.”
Profits from ratepayers funds foundation that gave $1 million to UWM and helps utility look like a good guy.
We should have a smaller jail and put more resources into strategies and efforts to keep people out of the criminal justice system and out of the Dane County Jail.
Gov. Tony Evers signed an executive order on Tuesday prohibiting price gouging on gasoline and diesel, a CYA political move arguably as pointless as the Democrat’s time in office.
Wisconsin’s gun laws are among the weakest in the country and the Legislature is only trying to make our state less safe.
Self-insured employers have been fighting the good fight against runaway health costs for their companies and for their workers for decades, without much help from state and national politicians. But a ray of sunshine has emerged: the courts.
On this Juneteenth we must examine the importance of that day to the Black community as well as ask if America has lived up to the questions posed by Frederick Douglass nearly 168 years ago.
A sitting senator went out of his way to step on the rule of law, our political institutions, and the election processes of our nation.
Scarlett Johnson sat down with Badger Institute Policy Director Patrick McIlheran to explain what drove her to act on behalf of her local schools, and why more parents should do so.
If Democrats find a way to hang on to the 3rd Congressional District in Southwestern Wisconsin this fall, it will almost certainly mean that Gov. Tony Evers will win a second term, that Sen. Ron Johnson will be defeated and that the Democrats will hold the Senate and stem their losses in the House.
A pair of state Democrat legislators plan to introduce a framework of bills that could build on Gov. Tony Evers’ clean energy plan.
That may be the most important question for Democratic voters.
The big government left has a simple plan for achieving absolute power … to seize control all three branches of government.
In Wisconsin we badly need some Republicans with the courage of Pence and Cheney — who memorably told her Republican colleagues in her opening statement of the Jan. 6 hearings, “There will come a day when Donald Trump is gone. Your dishonor will remain.”
Pence can’t help himself. The career politician, who has rarely let an election cycle pass without positioning for a bid for another high office, will keep trying to have it both ways.
The Seminole Tribe of Florida has cleared a first hurdle in its race to build a Hard Rock Casino in Kenosha, while the public remains in the dark about the behind-the-scenes wheeling and dealing.
Wisconsinites remain sour on the direction of a state led by Gov. Tony Evers, according to the latest University of Marquette Law School poll.
Michels and Kleefisch are tied. What’s interesting is where Michels’ support so far has come from.
The story in Wisconsin and nationally could not have been clearer.
Today, no actual conservative party policy idea can surface as the saturation of crazy has dominated every aspect of the GOP.
If you think otherwise, it means your own friends and neighbors are the “corrupt bureaucrats.”
Profits from ratepayers funds foundation that gave $1 million to UWM and helps utility look like a good guy.
We should have a smaller jail and put more resources into strategies and efforts to keep people out of the criminal justice system and out of the Dane County Jail.
Gov. Tony Evers signed an executive order on Tuesday prohibiting price gouging on gasoline and diesel, a CYA political move arguably as pointless as the Democrat’s time in office.
Wisconsin’s gun laws are among the weakest in the country and the Legislature is only trying to make our state less safe.
Self-insured employers have been fighting the good fight against runaway health costs for their companies and for their workers for decades, without much help from state and national politicians. But a ray of sunshine has emerged: the courts.
On this Juneteenth we must examine the importance of that day to the Black community as well as ask if America has lived up to the questions posed by Frederick Douglass nearly 168 years ago.
A sitting senator went out of his way to step on the rule of law, our political institutions, and the election processes of our nation.
Scarlett Johnson sat down with Badger Institute Policy Director Patrick McIlheran to explain what drove her to act on behalf of her local schools, and why more parents should do so.
If Democrats find a way to hang on to the 3rd Congressional District in Southwestern Wisconsin this fall, it will almost certainly mean that Gov. Tony Evers will win a second term, that Sen. Ron Johnson will be defeated and that the Democrats will hold the Senate and stem their losses in the House.
A pair of state Democrat legislators plan to introduce a framework of bills that could build on Gov. Tony Evers’ clean energy plan.
That may be the most important question for Democratic voters.
The big government left has a simple plan for achieving absolute power … to seize control all three branches of government.
In Wisconsin we badly need some Republicans with the courage of Pence and Cheney — who memorably told her Republican colleagues in her opening statement of the Jan. 6 hearings, “There will come a day when Donald Trump is gone. Your dishonor will remain.”
Pence can’t help himself. The career politician, who has rarely let an election cycle pass without positioning for a bid for another high office, will keep trying to have it both ways.
The Seminole Tribe of Florida has cleared a first hurdle in its race to build a Hard Rock Casino in Kenosha, while the public remains in the dark about the behind-the-scenes wheeling and dealing.