
John Nichols: Vote early for Judge Karofsky
Judge Karofsky is prepared to serve on the Supreme Court and deserves an overwhelming victory.
Submit columns for consideration to wisopinion@wispolitics.com
Judge Karofsky is prepared to serve on the Supreme Court and deserves an overwhelming victory.
The amendment, commonly known as Marsy’s Law for Wisconsin, seeks to strengthen the rights of crime victims to ensure their rights are equal alongside those of the accused. No more, no less.
Imagine the potential psychological and human toll if this shutdown continues indefinitely, unemployment reaches 20% or higher, as some now predict, and we sink into a deep recession or depression.
Many states doing better, data suggests. Milwaukee County looks behind, too.
Is it really wise or noble to sacrifice our way of life, even for a moment, in an effort to save a small percentage of the population– when it seems possible, and perhaps even probable, we are not even pursuing the most effective strategies to protect that vulnerable, small percentage of our population? We should stop conceding our right and duty to think and decide on such questions to the health experts who occupy unelected offices.
In recent weeks, some northern Wisconsin counties have drawn a COVID-19 line asking visitors to stay away—the opposite of the welcoming and inviting messages they have spent millions of dollars sending over decades—and threatening those that do come.
It’s no wonder he’s been elected for 64 years. He has stood for what’s good about Wisconsin and its people.
The television ads urging support for Marsy’s Law to grant equal rights to crime victims may sound reasonable. But a careful review of Marsy’s Law and the grave damage that enacting it could do to every accused citizen’s constitutional rights is anything but reasonable — it is dangerous.
All over the state, private and public charter schools are rallying to not only continue to provide educational services, but to care for their community.
There are many thousands of coronavirus cases and a rising death toll in the Midwest.
Our state’s Safer at Home order is meant to keep each Wisconsinite in every community of this state safe and healthy, and it may in fact be the most successful in rural areas.
The value of a community of business leaders has never been more relevant than it is today. I am proud to see the network of MMAC members working to support and serve each other. I know we will come through stronger together.
Consider that no snowstorm or cold front is too much for Green Bay Packer fans at Lambeau Field. Packer fans do not go in light clothes but instead bundle up in layers galore. That same spirit of overcoming the odds is precisely what we must employ now as we cast our ballots in the Spring Election.
Republican lawmakers say it has been difficult getting ahold of Gov. Tony Evers during the COVID-19 crisis. Try being Evers’ constituents.
And why is the research on this so sloppy?
With Wisconsin residents under Gov. Tony Evers’ stay-at-home order, the WisOpinion Insiders, Chvala and Jensen, consider how the COVID-19 pandemic is reshaping political organizing and the issues important to voters. Sponsored by Michael Best Strategies and the Wisconsin Counties Association.
This column is a follow-up about the long-term strategic path of the Cap Times, but it seemed necessary to acknowledge the pandemic as the elephant in the room.
Gov. Tony Evers’ stay-at-home order is in unavoidable tension with our Constitution and with the very foundation of the American project. It must be limited in duration, narrow in its application and requires extraordinary justification at every step of the way.
A leader’s strength is truly tested in times of crisis. Since January, President Donald Trump has firmly established himself as a bold, decisive and steadfast leader amid the outbreak of COVID-19.
It’s exposed weaknesses in Wisconsin that legislators must address after the crisis ends.
Judge Karofsky is prepared to serve on the Supreme Court and deserves an overwhelming victory.
The amendment, commonly known as Marsy’s Law for Wisconsin, seeks to strengthen the rights of crime victims to ensure their rights are equal alongside those of the accused. No more, no less.
Imagine the potential psychological and human toll if this shutdown continues indefinitely, unemployment reaches 20% or higher, as some now predict, and we sink into a deep recession or depression.
Many states doing better, data suggests. Milwaukee County looks behind, too.
Is it really wise or noble to sacrifice our way of life, even for a moment, in an effort to save a small percentage of the population– when it seems possible, and perhaps even probable, we are not even pursuing the most effective strategies to protect that vulnerable, small percentage of our population? We should stop conceding our right and duty to think and decide on such questions to the health experts who occupy unelected offices.
In recent weeks, some northern Wisconsin counties have drawn a COVID-19 line asking visitors to stay away—the opposite of the welcoming and inviting messages they have spent millions of dollars sending over decades—and threatening those that do come.
It’s no wonder he’s been elected for 64 years. He has stood for what’s good about Wisconsin and its people.
The television ads urging support for Marsy’s Law to grant equal rights to crime victims may sound reasonable. But a careful review of Marsy’s Law and the grave damage that enacting it could do to every accused citizen’s constitutional rights is anything but reasonable — it is dangerous.
All over the state, private and public charter schools are rallying to not only continue to provide educational services, but to care for their community.
There are many thousands of coronavirus cases and a rising death toll in the Midwest.
Our state’s Safer at Home order is meant to keep each Wisconsinite in every community of this state safe and healthy, and it may in fact be the most successful in rural areas.
The value of a community of business leaders has never been more relevant than it is today. I am proud to see the network of MMAC members working to support and serve each other. I know we will come through stronger together.
Consider that no snowstorm or cold front is too much for Green Bay Packer fans at Lambeau Field. Packer fans do not go in light clothes but instead bundle up in layers galore. That same spirit of overcoming the odds is precisely what we must employ now as we cast our ballots in the Spring Election.
Republican lawmakers say it has been difficult getting ahold of Gov. Tony Evers during the COVID-19 crisis. Try being Evers’ constituents.
And why is the research on this so sloppy?
With Wisconsin residents under Gov. Tony Evers’ stay-at-home order, the WisOpinion Insiders, Chvala and Jensen, consider how the COVID-19 pandemic is reshaping political organizing and the issues important to voters. Sponsored by Michael Best Strategies and the Wisconsin Counties Association.
This column is a follow-up about the long-term strategic path of the Cap Times, but it seemed necessary to acknowledge the pandemic as the elephant in the room.
Gov. Tony Evers’ stay-at-home order is in unavoidable tension with our Constitution and with the very foundation of the American project. It must be limited in duration, narrow in its application and requires extraordinary justification at every step of the way.
A leader’s strength is truly tested in times of crisis. Since January, President Donald Trump has firmly established himself as a bold, decisive and steadfast leader amid the outbreak of COVID-19.
It’s exposed weaknesses in Wisconsin that legislators must address after the crisis ends.