
Scott Walker: Open gubernatorial race in Wisconsin gives promise to conservatives
The race for governor in the most important swing state in the country is wide open.
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The race for governor in the most important swing state in the country is wide open.

The current delays and legal maneuvering surrounding the Line 5 relocation project serve no one. They hinder progress, put the energy security of millions at risk, and postpone job opportunities and infrastructure improvements that benefit both tribal nations and neighboring communities.

It’s an ideal time for leadership at the UW-Madison to consider creating a new college to focus on computing, data and AI.

Teen birthrates are a small fraction of what they used to be.

Obama never played hard against Donald Trump, Mitch McConnell and others. That flaw cost us dearly.

Jack Holzhueter, who recently celebrated his 90th birthday, went on from The Capital Times to become one of Wisconsin’s best-known and revered historians, working at the Wisconsin Historical Society for 36 years as a research specialist.

She’s death on “unelected bureaucrats.” What’s that all about?

Let’s not fear open processes. Let’s welcome it. Let’s create space for new voices and unexpected ideas. Let’s allow voters — not insiders — to choose.

Americans demand more from the government than they are willing to pay for, year after year. That translates to a debt bomb. Look around at your children and grandchildren. They will inherit our bomb.

America flourishes when Americans are willing to let go of yesterday and can’t wait for tomorrow to come, anxious to build something brand new. This is truly something to hope for, to plan for, to work for.

If children do not receive discipline at home, how can any adult in public be expected to check them when they misbehave?

When systemic manipulation rewrites who is thanked for doing the real work.

Justifying these cuts as a way to redirect funds from climate-related “social agendas” that conservatives have ridiculed for decades is simply negligent in every sense of the word.

Governor is a great gig and Evers has no clear heir apparent.

That is how Gov. Tony Evers presented himself back in 2018, and that is how he won against Scott Walker. As much as I would like a screaming progressive, Wisconsin is not ready for one yet.

This week, USDA Rural Development Wisconsin is celebrating National Farmers Market Week.

There was a time when the presidency stood for something more than power.It stood for virtue. For honesty. For the idea that the person behind the Resolute Desk was resolute in character, not just ambition. But that time feels like a relic of a vanished republic.

Now the targets have become children, farm workers, Home Depot employees and hundreds of thousands of people who have been in the U.S. for decades, earning a living, paying taxes and raising children.

On Aug. 2, I and a group of fellow believers will carry a large wooden cross through the streets of Madison. We will walk silently, not in protest of one political party or another, but against a deeper sickness — one that perverts the Gospel, sanctions cruelty, promotes violence, militarism and war, endangers our environment and wraps oppression in religious robes.

Asphalt art projects have taken off in the past decade as collaborations between cities, community groups and artists.

The race for governor in the most important swing state in the country is wide open.

The current delays and legal maneuvering surrounding the Line 5 relocation project serve no one. They hinder progress, put the energy security of millions at risk, and postpone job opportunities and infrastructure improvements that benefit both tribal nations and neighboring communities.

It’s an ideal time for leadership at the UW-Madison to consider creating a new college to focus on computing, data and AI.

Teen birthrates are a small fraction of what they used to be.

Obama never played hard against Donald Trump, Mitch McConnell and others. That flaw cost us dearly.

Jack Holzhueter, who recently celebrated his 90th birthday, went on from The Capital Times to become one of Wisconsin’s best-known and revered historians, working at the Wisconsin Historical Society for 36 years as a research specialist.

She’s death on “unelected bureaucrats.” What’s that all about?

Let’s not fear open processes. Let’s welcome it. Let’s create space for new voices and unexpected ideas. Let’s allow voters — not insiders — to choose.

Americans demand more from the government than they are willing to pay for, year after year. That translates to a debt bomb. Look around at your children and grandchildren. They will inherit our bomb.

America flourishes when Americans are willing to let go of yesterday and can’t wait for tomorrow to come, anxious to build something brand new. This is truly something to hope for, to plan for, to work for.

If children do not receive discipline at home, how can any adult in public be expected to check them when they misbehave?

When systemic manipulation rewrites who is thanked for doing the real work.

Justifying these cuts as a way to redirect funds from climate-related “social agendas” that conservatives have ridiculed for decades is simply negligent in every sense of the word.

Governor is a great gig and Evers has no clear heir apparent.

That is how Gov. Tony Evers presented himself back in 2018, and that is how he won against Scott Walker. As much as I would like a screaming progressive, Wisconsin is not ready for one yet.

This week, USDA Rural Development Wisconsin is celebrating National Farmers Market Week.

There was a time when the presidency stood for something more than power.It stood for virtue. For honesty. For the idea that the person behind the Resolute Desk was resolute in character, not just ambition. But that time feels like a relic of a vanished republic.

Now the targets have become children, farm workers, Home Depot employees and hundreds of thousands of people who have been in the U.S. for decades, earning a living, paying taxes and raising children.

On Aug. 2, I and a group of fellow believers will carry a large wooden cross through the streets of Madison. We will walk silently, not in protest of one political party or another, but against a deeper sickness — one that perverts the Gospel, sanctions cruelty, promotes violence, militarism and war, endangers our environment and wraps oppression in religious robes.

Asphalt art projects have taken off in the past decade as collaborations between cities, community groups and artists.