Here and Now
Here & Now for February 21, 2025
Season 2300 Episode 2332 | 26m 47sVideo has Closed Captions
Watch the entire episode of Here & Now for February 21.
Watch the entire episode of Here & Now for February 21.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
Here and Now is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin
Here and Now
Here & Now for February 21, 2025
Season 2300 Episode 2332 | 26m 47sVideo has Closed Captions
Watch the entire episode of Here & Now for February 21.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch Here and Now
Here and Now is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipThe following program is a PBS Wisconsin original production.
>> A low turnout spring primary advances to four finalists vying to be the state's top educator and Evers budget release begins the months long process of appropriations and priorities.
I'm Frederica Freyberg tonight on "Here& Now".
The governor released a massive executive budget.
What will stand and what will fall?
The spring primary election is out of the way.
State Superintendent and Supreme Court races pick up speed and new maps and a new session underway.
Bring new blood and energy to both chambers.
It's "Here& Now" for February 21st.
[MUSIC] >> Funding for here and Now is provided by the Focus Fund for Journalism and Friends of PBS Wisconsin.
>> Governor Tony Evers went on a statewide swing after presenting his 20 2527 executive budget this week, emphasizing increased education, spending and tax relief.
>> Wisconsinites wouldn't have taxes to keep school lights on and doors open.
If this legislature invested in K through 12 education from the get go in the budget, I'm announcing tonight proves we can both make the investments in our kids that we need to and hold the line on preventing property taxes from going up.
My plan will provide nearly $2 billion in tax relief through efforts to lower property taxes, eliminate the sales tax on several everyday expenses, and cut income taxes for middle class Wisconsinites, including homeowners, renters, veterans and seniors.
>> Top lines of the governor's proposal.
It's a $119 billion, two year budget that would increase spending by more than 20%.
It calls for $3.15 billion for K-12 education, 856 million for the University of Wisconsin, and 60 million for technical colleges.
It also calls for nearly $2 billion in tax relief and for raising taxes on high income earners.
Republicans once again consider all of it a nonstarter.
>> We confirmed what we suspected last night of it was kind of the same thing with reckless spending and tax increases.
And, you know, a liberal wish list that was going to be in there.
But we were a little bit surprised that it's actually that on steroids.
It's even bigger than last time.
The numbers were a little shocking budget that starts a little bit below $100 billion over the two years and pushed that to almost $119 billion.
It's a pretty serious escalating.
You're looking at 1300 new positions, just the growth of government.
Again, we knew he would grow government.
But when you actually see the level of the And I.
>> Wisconsin comes into the budget season with a $4.3 billion surplus.
But as expected, the Republican majority legislature calls the Evers plan dead on arrival.
Republican budget writers say they will start from scratch.
We're joined by Jason Stein of the Wisconsin Policy Forum for his take.
And thanks for being here, Jason.
>> Thank you.
So it sure seems like a lot of work and a lot of number crunching on the part of the governor and his administration to end up with a budget that's D.O.A.
Is it more like a potential reelection vision statement on the governor's part?
>> Potentially, yes.
I mean, it's certainly a vision statement.
Right.
And you do feel a little bit for the analysts and budget writers who work, you know, painstakingly to put all this stuff together.
And then it's right into the trash heap in some sense.
But there may be some areas where they can work together.
I mean, the governor had an increase in tax credits for buying down local property taxes.
He had a tips taking off income taxes for tips.
So there are some areas where Republicans have worked in those same vein in the past.
So there may be some areas where they can have a meeting of the minds.
But clearly on many things in this budget, there will not be.
>> In fact, I was going to just ask of all of the spending in it.
Could the only agreement really come with tax cuts?
>> Well, that's where the real rub is going to be.
Or the back and forth with the governor.
I mean, the governor's proposal would decrease some taxes, but raise a number of others, and on net would increase taxes by more than $2 billion.
Now, obviously, given that the state has a $4 billion surplus, that's a nonstarter for Republicans.
They will be looking at large income tax cuts, which last time the governor vetoed.
I think the thing that will probably keep both sides working with one another is with no budget passing, there would be upward pressure on property taxes around the state, particularly school property taxes, because of provisions that are in current law.
So I think both sides are going to really feel some pressure to get a deal, because they don't really want to see that happen.
With K-12 test scores, really.
Sadly sagging.
I trust pouring more than $3 billion into that part of the education budget and freezing school choice slots is not the majority's idea of an answer.
>> I mean, clearly they're very far apart from one another.
On the issue of both income taxes and education.
You know, the one being the Republican priority, the other being the governor's priority.
I think, again, where you have some impetus to get that increase is in the governor in his veto last year, put for 400 years, he stuck in with his partial veto.
This steady increase in the limits, the state limits that govern how much school districts can spend.
And so they're going to get like a two and a half or 3% bump in that spending limit.
Revenue limit every year.
And so if there's no budget, there's no state aid to kind of take up the slack there and keep property taxes from going up.
And I think that's something that Republicans have in the back of their heads and will be a reason for them not to walk away from the negotiating table.
>> Where else might the sides potentially come together?
What about Evers prison plan that would eventually close?
Green Bay Correctional?
Do Republicans take parts of that and kind of call it their own and rework it?
>> Great question.
I mean, I think there's something fundamentally there that must be dealt with.
I mean, we have two prisons that go back to the 19th century.
Waupan and green Bay Correctional.
The governor wants to close green Bay Correctional.
He has a very creative way to do that.
I mean, it's kind of like a flea flicker play in football where you're you're passing the ball from one player to another and they're throwing down field.
It's a touchdown.
If you get that and you connect on that play.
But it also has a lot of ways it can break down.
I suspect the Republicans will probably not take that plan in its entirety, but some elements of it, they may do.
>> Also, Evers proposes what's described as an historic investment in the university.
$856 million over two years.
Given what's happening around the state with closures and layoffs and that kind of thing at the at the colleges, does that resonate?
>> It's a great question.
I mean, the issue of higher education has become very politicized, much more than it was, let's say, two decades ago.
And so, you see, actually, at the federal level, some dispute right over whether to decrease the amount of research grant funding that goes out to universities like UW-Madison or the Medical College of Wisconsin, or even UW Milwaukee, whether or not there there may be some increase on the possibility, because in many cases, the UW campuses that would be hurt the most would be in more Republican areas, or at least in purple areas of the state.
So that one, I think, is to BD.
>> It seemed of note to me that Evers was using his budget to try to guard against impacts from President Trump's actions out of Washington, saving out what was it, nearly $500 million of kind of in case money, right?
>> I mean, the governor's leaving enough reserves to cover about 10% of state spending.
I mean, that's historically a pretty good number.
At the same time, it would not be enough in the event of a really severe recession.
So I think there will be some back and forth with the legislature.
Again, the governor would pull down roughly $3.5 billion of the surplus.
But, you know, Republicans did the same thing two years ago with their income tax proposal.
And the governor just partially vetoed it.
So I think part of the question is, do the two sides working at cross-purposes get us to a sustainable budget, which is what has happened in recent cycles, or an unsustainable budget, which is more what happened in the 2000 when you and I were starting at the state Capitol.
Stein, thanks very much.
Thanks for joining us and your expertise.
>> Thank you.
>> This year's election for a seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court is shaping up to be one of the most expensive ever.
Fundraising totals released by the campaigns of Liberal candidate Susan Crawford and Conservative candidate Brad Schimel show they are on pace to exceed the $50 million price tag from 2023, which was the most expensive state Supreme Court race in American history.
Here and now, senior political reporter Zach Schultz has more on how all this money will impact the cases.
The winner will hear once they are on the court.
>> Arthouse Preschool.
And with Susan Crawford on the bench, your street could be next.
[MUSIC] >> Brad Schimel is too extreme for the Supreme Court.
>> Just five weeks from Election Day, the Schimel and Crawford campaigns are filling the airwaves and social media with millions of dollars in campaign ads.
In 2023, the race between Janet Protasiewicz and Daniel Kelly was the most expensive state Supreme Court race in U.S. History, with candidates and third party groups spending more than $50 million.
It was for an open seat, and the winner would determine the ideological control of the court.
It's the same setup in 2025, so it should come as no surprise.
We're on pace to break spending records.
>> It's like inflation.
It never goes down.
It always only seems to go up and I suspect this race is going to have even more money spent than in 2023.
You know, you can only run so many TV ads before you've made your point.
But this is what you've got to do.
I've got to be competitive.
The other side has got to be competitive.
We're both working to have the resources we need to get our message out.
>> The maximum an individual can donate to a campaign is $20,000.
But years ago, Republicans rewrote campaign laws so individuals could give an unlimited amount to state parties, which can in turn give unlimited amounts to campaigns.
In the latest fundraising totals, billionaire donors gave millions to the Republican and Democratic parties.
The Republican Party of Wisconsin transferred $1.7 million to Schimel campaign, while the Democratic Party of Wisconsin transferred 3 million to Crawford's campaign.
In 2023, Janet Protasiewicz received a lot of direct transfers from the Democratic Party of Wisconsin to help fund her campaign, and in turn, she said that she would recuse herself from any cases that involved the Democratic Party of Wisconsin as a party.
Would you do the same if you receive a large, direct contributions from the Democratic Party of Wisconsin?
>> You know, I what I would do is if a case came before the Supreme Court in which the Democratic Party was a party is to look at what the facts were in that case, who the other parties were and what the legal issues were that at stake, and then make a decision about recusal based on the specific instances of that case.
I think, you know, I'm a I'm a pretty cautious person as a judge.
And I, I don't prejudge matters like that and would wait to see what what that case brought and whether I could be fair and impartial.
And if, if it was a situation where I believed I could not be fair and impartial due to past political support, financing support from the Democratic Party, I would certainly recuse.
>> How will you approach recusal when it comes to those who have supported you, donated to you, endorsed you?
>> Well, it's awfully hard for justice.
Protasiewicz to say.
She'll recuse on anything that the Democratic Party is involved in.
But then she stayed on the legislative redistricting maps, and she came.
Well, they're not directly a party.
Come on.
They were the clear beneficiary of that decision.
I think she was putting form over substance very much there.
But for a judicial official at any level, your responsibility is if you have a personal stake, you or some family member has a personal stake in the outcome of this case, you must recuse.
That's unethical not to do so.
Otherwise, just like a juror, when they're asked questions in the jury box, can you to find out whether they can be on this case and be fair and impartial?
The judge needs to search their soul and determine, can you decide this case without having any political baggage, without having your personal history or biases interfere with your ability to be fair and impartial?
If you cannot do that, then you should recuse.
Legislature.
>> One of the biggest cases the winner could see is a challenge to act ten.
The Scott Walker era law that eliminated most collective bargaining rights for most public employees.
Just recently, Justice Protasiewicz announced she would not recuse herself from the act ten challenge, currently heading to the appellate courts, saying her opposition to the law as a private citizen would not impact her ability to rule as a justice.
>> However, Conservative Justice Brian Hagedorn announced he would recuse himself from hearing that case because while serving as then governor, Walker's chief legal counsel, Hagedorn helped write that law and later defended it in court.
Crawford served in that exact same position for Governor Jim Doyle, so she understands Hagedorn's role.
>> So for him, having taken a position already on that exact provision and trying to defend it in court, I think he made the right decision to recuse himself.
And, you know, if I had been in exactly that situation as Justice Hagedorn is, I think I would have made the same decision.
general from 2015 to 2019.
>> Act ten was resolved in the US Supreme Court and the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals.
Even before I was attorney general, I was still in the DA's office when those issues were decided by those courts.
So I've never had any direct role in anything involving act ten.
What I do ask voters is to ask themselves whether they think that if my opponent wins, can this court truly be objective?
When two justices sitting on the court, both Justice Protasiewicz and Justice Dallet, were both caught on video promising if elected they would strike down act ten and then my opponent represented the Madison Teachers Association in the lawsuit to strike down act ten, and she argued that it should be found unconstitutional.
Can she be objective?
When she had a former client that that had her do that work for her?
And can those other two be objective based on those promises?
I can ask those questions.
I'm not going to tell anybody how I'm going to rule, because like I do in every case, I will read the briefs, I will assess the facts, I will look at the relevant law.
I'll read all the cases, and then I'll assess what the right answer is based on the law.
>> In private practice.
You also were a part of an act ten lawsuit.
Would that prevent you from sitting on any cases regarding act ten in the future?
>> You know, if a case came up, whether it's on act ten or anything else, that any other topic that I had some role in, in, in challenging while I was a lawyer, I would give it a very close look to see what the facts were that were presented in that new case, who the parties were, and what kind of legal issues are being raised, and make a determination about whether I could be fair and impartial.
Sitting on that case.
That's what the law requires us to do, and that's what I do in every case.
Zach Schultz for "Here& Now".
>> In the spring primary race, the only statewide race.
And in some districts, the only race was between three candidates for state superintendent of schools.
Incumbent Jill Underly faced off with challengers Jeff Wright, a Liberal candidate and district superintendent in Sauk Prairie, and Brittany Kinser, a conservative candidate and education consultant who does not hold a teaching license.
Kinser and Underly edged out opponent Wright by roughly 33 and 49,000 votes, respectively, and will advance to April's general election.
Back at the Capitol Assembly, Republicans passed a package of education bills.
The legislation would realign statewide testing standards back to national levels, ban the use of cell phones by students during class time, require cursive instruction and a specific civics instruction.
Instructional materials must be made available for inspection by district residents, and 70% of operating expenses must go toward direct classroom costs and teacher salaries, and limit pay increases for school administrators.
Republicans say the bills are necessary to improve achievement levels.
>> Since 2011, 2012, we have actually seen with demographic changes, about a 6.5% decline in the total number of students attending school in Wisconsin.
But we have actually seen a 39% increase in spending during that same time.
So the challenge that we have is we now know that just simply increasing education funding doesn't necessarily mean we have higher standards.
It doesn't mean that we have better outcomes.
Our test results and our test scores clearly show that.
So what we want to make sure is that at a time when only 31% of the students who are taking the fourth grade test are reading at grade level, we want to make sure that that actually gets better than where it is now.
In fact, right now, that test score is the lowest that it's been since 1992.
Where before many kids, actually many people were even born.
So the results that we have are disappointing.
They are really frustrating, but they are also a wake up call for Wisconsin.
>> Newly elected legislators are finding their way at the state capitol.
More than a quarter of the members in the Assembly and Senate are freshmen.
After legislative districts were redrawn last year.
There are 23 new Democratic lawmakers in the Assembly and eight new Republicans.
Here and now, reporter Aditi Debnath met with two new state reps. Now a month in to the legislative session.
>> I full disclosure and completely overwhelmed.
>> We sat down and I said, let's do this.
And we went 100 miles an hour from there.
>> Representatives Lindee Brill and Angelina Cruz are newbies in the Wisconsin Assembly.
>> It's a new job.
It's a new environment.
It's a big buildin.
So even getting my directions down has been a challenge.
But I'm excited for the challenge.
>> They spent the first few days after inauguration getting their bearings in the Capitol ahead of the first session.
>> I keep describing it as like speed dating with different governmental departments.
Like you get like the quick overview and then they're like, here's our card.
You can reach out at any time, and then you move on to the next one.
>> As they begin budget season, Brill and Cruz represent the changing face of Wisconsin politics, bringing fresh perspectives to the state legislature.
Representative Brill is one of eight Republican rookies in the Assembly, representing the 27th district.
>> The easiest way to describe it would be if you take Sheboygan.
So Ana Wilson City of Sheboygan, then Town of Sheboygan.
I'm pretty much everything around it, all the way west to Fond du Lac and down.
So to Cheatle would be the edge of my district, all the way down to like Cascade and then over to I-43.
>> On the other side of the aisle.
Representative Angelina Cruz is one of 23 New Democrats in the Assembly representing district 62.
>> The vast bulk of it is the city of Racine.
It stretches.
>> To the north is it's Racine and.
North Bay, and it stretches up to Wind Point.
And then it covers a sliver of Caledonia and a sliver of Mount Pleasant.
>> While both Brill and Cruz are first time lawmakers, they represent opposite ends of the partizan spectrum, each seeking to make their mark on Wisconsin politics.
Representative Brill made headlines in her first week after sitting out the vote, where Assembly Speaker Robin Vos won a record seventh term in that office.
>> I just felt we needed to head in a more conservative direction.
I think there's sometimes some things that went a little more moderate than I would have voted for, but I respect the way the vote went and I look forward to working with leadership and knowing that, trusting that they'll lead us where we need to go.
>> In contrast to Brill, Cruz brings a progressive perspective to Madison as the first Latina to represent Racine and a member of the LGBTQ community.
She ran unopposed in the newly drawn district 62.
>> He had been the most gerrymandered state in the country, and that these more fair maps presented an opportunity to actually be in the state House and be an advocate in a way that potentially could be more effective.
>> Cruz is the president of her local teacher's union and first got involved in politics when the state legislature passed act 10 in 2011, which made it harder for teachers to unionize.
>> I'll open it up for debate.
>> I feel like everybody wants to talk about money, right?
It's budget season.
>> Her top priority going into this budget session is funding for public schools.
>> People just want a hand up.
And in terms of meeting basic needs, that's mostly what what I heard on the doors, the opportunity to purchase a home, the opportunity to send their kids to school just to have like, just their basic needs me.
>> On Monday, she met with union teachers at Schulte Elementary in her district.
They shared concerns about an April referendum and how they'll support their students if it doesn't pass.
Representative Cruz says the answer is in the state budget.
>> I encourage you strongly to use your teacher voices.
Call your legislators.
Let them know.
Like this is you need to fully fund public schools.
You need to fully fund special education.
That's something the state superintendent, Jill Underly, put into her recommended budget to the governor.
>> In Sheboygan, Representative Brill got started in politics.
Jung.
>> My mom had kind of always been the political one in our house.
We spent many times talking about the pro-life movement, how we wanted to be a part of protecting the unborn.
Campaign manager was good friends with my mom, and he came to her funeral, and I promised him I would carry on the torch.
>> Brill took over her mother's hobby farm after her passing.
>> This time of year, production is down a little bit.
>> She says she ran with the goal of protecting life beginning at conception, an >> I know that's probably not one that I'm going to reach across the aisle and probably have a lot of conversations about, but I do think there are others.
priority is addressing the fentanyl crisis in her district.
>> Being able to see how people struggle in our community was one of my main pushes to want to go to Madison to see change for them.
>> Brill works at Samaritan's Hand, a faith based drug and alcohol treatment center, and was named vice chair of the Committee on Mental Health and Substance Abuse Prevention.
>> These are people I've cared about.
These are people I've called family I've lost, and people are still here.
My dad has been sober for 12 years, and his journey was a part of me wanting to get involved in here.
>> Back in Madison, Representatives Brill and Cruz continue navigating their first term in the legislature.
Cruz says she has never felt more like a grade schooler.
>> One of the things I always liked about teaching is working with kids.
They bring such new and fresh perspectives and are excited about everything.
>> She says that in a way, there are 31 new kids under the dome.
>> Maybe that's a you can assign that to our naivete about what we're about to experience, but I like to think it brings an energy that maybe, maybe is needed at this moment in time.
>> Throughout our state, we have constituents who have elected Republicans and Democrats to represent us.
So at the end of the day, we're called to work together to best represent our >> Reporting from Sheboygan and Racine.
I'm Aditi Debnath for "Here& Now".
>> For more on this and other issues facing Wisconsin, visit our website at PBS Wisconsin and then click on the news tab.
That's our program for tonight.
I'm Frederica Freyberg.
Have a good weekend.
[MUSIC] >> Funding for "Here& Now" is provided by the Focus Fund for Journalism and Friends of PBS Wisconsin.
Here & Now opening for February 21, 2025
Video has Closed Captions
The introduction to the February 21, 2025 episode of Here & Now. (1m 1s)
Jason Stein on the Politics of Wisconsin's 2025 Budget Cycle
Video has Closed Captions
Jason Stein on the prospects of the 2025-27 state budget proposals from Gov. Tony Evers. (6m 21s)
New Lawmakers Find Their Bearings in Wisconsin's Legislature
Video has Closed Captions
A pair of new Wisconsin lawmakers share their thoughts at the start of the 2025 session. (6m 43s)
Underly and Kinser Advance to the Spring 2025 DPI Election
Video has Closed Captions
Dr. Jill Underly and Brittany Kinser won the spring 2025 primary for state superintendent. (37s)
Wisconsin Republicans Pass Educational Standards Package
Video has Closed Captions
Assembly Republicans passed education bills on testing, administrator pay and more. (1m 38s)
Wisconsin's 2025 Budget Proposals from Evers and Republicans
Video has Closed Captions
Tony Evers unveiled his 2025-27 state budget, and Mark Born shared the Republican stance. (2m 4s)
The 2025 Candidates for Wisconsin Supreme Court and Recusal
Video has Closed Captions
When would Susan Crawford and Brad Schimel recuse from a Wisconsin Supreme Court case? (7m 47s)
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipHere and Now is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin