Susan Crawford and Brad Schimel bring their political histories — and partisan backers —to the race for the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
Conservative candidate Brad Schimel refuses to criticize the president for freeing rioters who assaulted law enforcement officers.
Just over thre months after its introduction, a proposal that would have added a 0.5% sales tax in Waukesha County is now off the table. County
The liberal candidate for the Wisconsin Supreme Court participated in a fundraiser billed as a “chance to put two more House seats in play,” a move that Republicans say shows that she is committed to redrawing congressional districts to benefit Democrats.
A 72-year-old bus driver in Hartland, Wisconsin, was arrested for operating while intoxicated after he wouldn't let kids off the bus and was driving erratically.
A recent Waukesha County Drug Task Force investigation resulted in the seizure of guns, drugs, cash and more in Milwaukee County.
The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources said there have been at least five vehicles that have fallen through ice in Waukesha and Racine counties so far this year. The Waukesha County Sheriff's Department said a 61-year-old man died after he fell through the ice on Pewaukee Lake on Saturday afternoon, Jan. 25.
One of the most outspoken officers who defended the U.S. Capitol against rioters on Jan. 6, 2021, is emphasizing President Donald Trump's pardons in Wisconsin's high profile Supreme Court race.
Both campaigns are trying to use the issue to define Brad Schimel, the former Republican attorney general and a current Waukesha County judge.
The Republican-backed candidate in Wisconsin’s pivotal state Supreme Court race says he thinks anyone convicted of assaulting law enforcement officers should serve their entire sentence.
Susan Crawford is considered the liberal candidate in the state Supreme Court contest to replace retiring liberal Justice Ann Walsh Bradley. A Crawford win would block the seven-person high court from flipping back to conservative control.
The event is just one of many partisan gatherings both candidates in the nonpartisan-in-name-only race have attended.