Here and Now
Zac Schultz on Wisconsin's 2024 Vote Results, 2025 Prospects
Clip: Season 2300 Episode 2319 | 6m 24sVideo has Closed Captions
Zac Schultz on 2024 vote results for U.S. Senate, both chambers of the state Legislature.
PBS Wisconsin senior political reporter Zac Schultz discusses results of 2024 votes for U.S. Senate and both chambers of the Wisconsin Legislature as the 2025 state Supreme Court election approaches.
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
Zac Schultz on Wisconsin's 2024 Vote Results, 2025 Prospects
Clip: Season 2300 Episode 2319 | 6m 24sVideo has Closed Captions
PBS Wisconsin senior political reporter Zac Schultz discusses results of 2024 votes for U.S. Senate and both chambers of the Wisconsin Legislature as the 2025 state Supreme Court election approaches.
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 sponsorshipwork.
>> Even as Tammy Baldwin made her victory speech two days after the election, Eric Hovde demurred on conceding Zac Schultz joins us now from the Capitol with more on this and a look at legislative races.
Hey, Zach.
>> Hello, Fred.
>> So, for his part, Eric Hovde blames a third party candidate on his loss.
What is that about?
>> Well, I'm sure for most of our viewers, this will be the first time they've heard of Thomas Leiber.
He he really came out of nowhere.
He doesn't have any party.
He didn't really come as attached to running any ads or anything like that.
But his name did appear on the ballot, and he did receive a significant number of votes for a third party candidate.
And it becomes more significant when you have a tighter race.
However, even Bryan Schimming, chairman of the Republican Party of Wisconsin, said it's incumbent on their candidate to let voters know who is the real Republican in the race and this isn't the first time that third party candidates have played spoiler.
The third party candidates in the presidential race took a significant number of votes.
In 2016, Democrats blamed Jill Stein and the Green Party for taking a significant number of votes away from Hillary Clinton.
A lot of these cases, it's simply people deciding to raise a protest vote.
And when they're voting third party, especially if they don't know who the actual candidate is.
And in fact, if Hovde had just ran closer to Trump, then perhaps he would have come out ahead of Baldwin.
But he's blaming it on a third party candidate at this point.
allowed a switch from the current 22 to 11 Republican majority in the state Senate to an election pickup of four seats for Democrats, narrowing the Republican majority in that chamber to 18 to 15.
What are the implications of that?
>> Well, it's pretty big in the Senate.
Republicans had a supermajority, which means they had the ability to constitutionally impeach people.
We've seen them do that in the past.
They refused to seat any of Governor Evers appointees and rejected quite a few of them.
So with that large of a power imbalance in the state Senate, Republicans could do whatever they wanted with a much more narrow majority.
Not only did they lose two incumbents, which is pretty significant.
Duey Strobel sits on joint finance and he was a big conservative figurehead in that party.
And knocking him off is a pretty big accomplishment for Democrats.
And just the implications of them running ahead and against these Republican headwinds that came everywhere else.
These were four swing seats that they won and picked up in this race.
And in prior years where we've seen a red wave election, so to speak, 2010 2014 Democrats down ballot are getting crushed.
So the Democrats are rightfully so, saying they did a really big job of winning these seats and putting themselves in position to possibly challenge for the majority in the Senate in 2026.
>> So in the Assembly, the current Republican majority is 64 to 35, and Democrats picked up ten seats in that chamber, bringing their majority down to 54 to 45.
Now that's a smaller gain, but still potentially predictive for 2026.
>> Well, it's significant in a lot of ways, not in the Assembly.
Republicans were only two seats short of a supermajority, which meant in the last session, Democrats had to have every member there every session day, because if they shrunk their amount, then that reduced what the Republicans needed to possibly override some of Governor Evers vetoes.
That threat is gone in this next session.
And once again, it puts Democrats in position to challenge for the majorities in 26.
And most importantly, we should see shifts in what it means over the next two years of governing in this state.
I don't think anyone's going to predict that Republicans and Governor Evers are suddenly going to have a great relationship.
But every vote that these Republicans tak, they're going to have to think about their vulnerable members and what it might mean back in their district in the next election in years.
And sessions past.
Robin Vos, for example, the Assembly Speaker, has let some of his more vulnerable Republicans vote no against some Republican legislation because with 64 or 60 votes, it mattered that it passed this time around with only a 54 seat majority.
If he can't let that many of these vulnerable members take really damaging votes.
So you might see a shift in what actually comes to the floor over the next two years.
around the corner from a state Supreme Court spring election on April 1st.
What are the stakes in that race?
>> Well, every time we have an election in Wisconsin, people say it's the most important election of your lifetime.
And they'll be saying that about this one again.
Right now, the Supreme Court has a 4 to 3 Liberal majority.
The Justice that is retiring is Justice Ann Walsh Bradley.
She is part of that Liberal majority.
So with her out it's three three.
Whoever wins this, whether it's a conservative candidate or Liberal candidate, will decide the makeup of the majority for the foreseeable future.
So it actually is quite significant.
Last time around with the Janet Protasiewicz, we saw record national level spending.
We're probably going to see that again.
That's coming up in April.
So people who thought the political ads were gone for their television, you may get a couple months off, but the ads are coming back and they're going to come back in a big way.
>> So the current Liberal majority court is hearing oral arguments on Monday in the lawsuit over abortion in Wisconsin.
What will that be deciding?
we handle abortion in Wisconsin.
Currently, the 1849 law that handles and regulates abortion in Wisconsin has been put on hold by a Dane County judge.
So the Supreme Court is reviewing whether that's appropriate, whether abortion laws that have been passed since 1849 supersede and override that.
And so we're kind of in a Roe environment as far as what that matters.
But they'll also at the same time be deciding if there is a constitutional right to abortion, health care in Wisconsin.
So they could go either way.
And as for what we should expect next Monday, there's going to be increased security in the Capitol.
We've already been told people will have to pass through metal detectors to get into the chamber.
They're expecting protesters.
It's also Veterans middle of oral arguments, we can expect to hear a 21 gun salute for Veterans Day programing.
So there will be a lot going on.
The bigger question, especially tying it back to that election that we were just talking about, is when this decision might be released.
Does it come down before that April Supreme Court election impacting it that way, or will it be released after that election so that we don't know the fate of abortion rights in Wisconsin in leading into that election next year?
>> All right, Zac Schultz, >> All right, Zac Schultz,
Anthony Chergosky on the Landscape of Wisconsin's 2024 Vote
Video has Closed Captions
Anthony Chergosky on the 2024 vote and factors contributing to Donald Trump's win. (7m 22s)
Here & Now opening for November 8, 2024
Video has Closed Captions
The introduction to the November 8, 2024 episode of Here & Now. (1m 5s)
McCoshen & Ross on Implications, Impacts of Trump's 2024 Win
Video has Closed Captions
Bill McCoshen, Scot Ross on Donald Trump's 2024 victory and what it means for Wisconsin. (8m 56s)
Recapping Wisconsin's Vote for President, US Senate in 2024
Video has Closed Captions
Donald Trump beat Kamala Harris, Tammy Baldwin beat Eric Hovde in Wisconsin's 2024 vote. (2m 27s)
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipHere and Now is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin