Liberal Judge Susan Crawford wins Wisconsin Supreme Court race – Washington Examiner

In a significant victory for the Democratic Party, Judge Susan Crawford, a liberal candidate, won the Wisconsin Supreme Court race against conservative challenger Judge Brad Schimel.The election, which took place amid record-breaking spending—nearly $99 million—was seen as a referendum on former President Donald TrumpS influence in the state. Crawford garnered about 56% of the votes, while Schimel received 44%.

High-profile endorsements played a crucial role, with support for Crawford coming from prominent figures like former President Barack Obama and financier george Soros, while Trump and Elon Musk backed schimel. The outcome not only maintains a 4-3 liberal majority in the court but also signals a shifting political landscape post-Trump’s early presidency, energizing the Democratic base and raising concerns among some Republicans.

The election saw an exceptionally high voter turnout, with predictions of over two million participants, reflecting the stakes involved, including issues like abortion, redistricting, and voting rules that the court is set to tackle in the future. The race highlighted both candidates’ strategies,with Schimel attempting to rally Trump’s base and Crawford emphasizing her independence from partisan politicization of the courts.


Liberal Judge Susan Crawford wins Wisconsin Supreme Court race

MADISON, Wisconsin — Judge Susan Crawford, the liberal candidate in Wisconsin’s Supreme Court election, beat conservative challenger Judge Brad Schimel in a contest that shattered spending records and turned a state race into a referendum on President Donald Trump.

NBC and CNN called the race for Crawford around 10 p.m. Eastern time Tuesday. With about half of the ballots counted, Crawford led with 56% of the vote to Schimel’s 44%. 

The outcome of the high-stakes election provides the best evidence to date that Trump’s first few chaotic months in office have turned off some Republicans and re-energized the Democratic Party.

Crawford’s win keeps the court’s current 4-3 majority as it gets ready to hear cases on abortion, redistricting, and voting rules. 

Trump and Elon Musk put their financial and political muscle behind Schimel, while former President Barack Obama, George Soros, and Gov. JB Pritzker (D-IL) opened their wallets for Crawford. In all, nearly $99 million was spent on the race, making it the most expensive judicial contest in U.S. history. 

At stake was not only a seat on the state Supreme Court but also an opportunity to directly affect the national political landscape.  

“Wisconsin’s a big state politically, and the Supreme Court has a lot to do with elections in Wisconsin,” Trump said Monday. “Winning Wisconsin’s a big deal, so therefore the Supreme Court choice … it’s a big race.”

Musk, who traveled to Green Bay on Sunday to hand out two $1 million checks to voters, called the election one that could “affect the entire destiny of humanity.” 

“What’s happening on Tuesday is a vote for which party controls the U.S. House of Representatives,” Musk said. “That is why it is so significant. Whichever party controls the House to a significant degree controls the country, which then steers the course of Western civilization. I feel like this is one of those things that may not seem that it’s going to affect the entire destiny of humanity, but I think it will.”

Musk spent more than $20 million to back Schimel, making him the single largest spender in the race. His super PAC, America PAC, has spent over $6.6 million on the election. The group created a canvassing operation of more than 500 employees who relentlessly knocked on doors in rural areas of the state and left-leaning Madison and Milwaukee.

The canvassers were paid workers, making $25 an hour, three times more than Wisconsin’s minimum wage. The group purportedly knocked on a million doors to push not only Schimel as a candidate but also Musk and Trump’s agenda.

Schimel leaned into his support from Trump and Musk during the final few weeks of the race. 

Republicans tried to recast the contest as a chance for Trump’s base to come out and show their loyalty to him and push back against judges Trump claims treat him and his administration unfairly. The strategy was that if Republicans, with Trump and Musk’s help, could get 60% of his base to the polls, Schimel could pull off the win. 

Election officials in Wisconsin expected more than two million people to vote, an extremely strong turnout in an off-year race.

On the campaign trail, Schimel wore Trump hats and retold conversations he had with the president. He also painted Crawford as a candidate weak on crime and claimed she would push to redraw congressional district lines to favor Democrats and repeal Act 10, a state law that took collective bargaining rights away from most public workers. He also hinted at past election fraud claims but told the Washington Examiner he would respect the outcome of the race. Despite running as an underdog, he said he understood “what the stakes are.”

WISCONSIN SUPREME COURT RACE SEES STRONG VOTER TURNOUT AND BALLOT SHORTAGES

“I am not going to leave anything on the field,” he said. “We are going to run right through the tape on Tuesday and win this thing.” 

For her part, Crawford repeatedly called Schimel out for his close ties to Trump and Musk, though she was also on the receiving end of millions of dollars in out-of-state donations. At her final campaign stop in Madison on Monday, she called Schimel “a partisan politician who wants to politicize our courts and is willing to sell out to the highest bidder.”  



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