John Fetterman's Latest Tweet About Iran Will Likely Anger Libs
In Defense of Large Families
Iran So Far Away From Objectivity, As Epic Fury Has the Media in...
You Cannot Dialogue With Evil
SWAT Raid in Illinois Illustrates Stupidity of State's Gun Laws
Isolationism Is an Embarrassment to American Strength
From Los Angeles to NYC: Iranian Americans Thank President Trump for Operation Epic...
Qatar Shoots Down Two Iranian Jets That Entered It's Airspace
The UN Responds to Iran Strikes With Its Favorite Weapon: A Strongly Worded...
The Texas Primaries Are Tomorrow Night. Here Are All of the Races to...
SCOTUS Hands Republicans A Massive Redistricting Victory
U.S. Embassy in Saudi Arabia on Fire After Apparent Drone Attack
Roy Cooper Caught Running Away From Questions About His History of Releasing Dangerous...
Six U.S. Service Members Killed: CENTCOM Provides Update Over First 48 Hours of...
U.S. Forces Destroy All Iranian Ships in the Gulf of Oman
Tipsheet

Vote Cavass Over, Prosser Wins in Wisconsin

Vote Cavass Over, Prosser Wins in Wisconsin
Oh yes:

A conservative justice has weathered attempts to link him to Wisconsin's governor and a divisive union rights law and won re-election, according to county vote totals finalized Friday.

Advertisement

Tallies from each of the state's 72 counties show Justice David Prosser defeated challenger JoAnne Kloppenburg by 7,316 votes. State election officials said they will wait to declare an official winner until the deadline for Kloppenburg to seek a recount passes. She has until Wednesday to call for one.

Kloppenburg faced an uphill fight against Prosser, a 12-year court veteran and former Republican Assembly speaker. But she got a boost in the weeks leading up to the election as her supporters worked to turn anger against Gov. Scott Walker and the union rights law against Prosser.

The law, which Walker wrote, strips most public sector workers of nearly all their collective bargaining rights. It also requires them to contribute more to their health care and pensions, changes that will result in an average 8 percent pay cut.

Advertisement

Tens of thousands of people converged on the state Capitol for weeks to protest and minority Democrats in the Senate fled the state in a futile attempt to block a vote in that chamber. The law is currently tied up in the courts and hasn't taken effect. Those legal challenges look destined for the state Supreme Court.

The law's opponents hoped a Kloppenburg upset over Prosser would tilt the court to the left and set the stage for the justices to overturn the measure.


Let's start the weekend off right with a moment of pure schadenfruede:



"We did win, and we're confident the margin will hold."

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement