The three biggest races on your ballot this November (besides the presidency)
There’s more on your ballot than the presidential race this November – here are three races that you should be familiar with before heading to the polls.
There’s more on your ballot than the presidential race this November – here are three races that you should be familiar with before heading to the polls.
Check out our guide to where Harris and Trump stand on Wisconsin voters' top issues, including the economy, healthcare, and the US Supreme Court.
Harris has vowed to strengthen workers’ rights, expand financial support for the working class, boost opportunities for non-college graduates, and raise the minimum wage. Trump, meanwhile, has promised to implement tariffs on imports and repeal federal investments in clean energy, both of which would likely lead to job losses.
More than 1,800 local clerks and many more of your Wisconsin friends and neighbors have got this—another secure election.
The proposal comes days before Election Day, as Vice President Kamala Harris affixes her presidential campaign to a promise of expanding women's health care access in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to undo nationwide abortion rights two years ago.
During a weekend appearance in Pennsylvania, 78-year-old Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump spent 12 minutes rambling about golfer Arnold Palmer — including a bizarre aside about the size of Palmer’s genitalia.
This November, all Wisconsin voters will have a statewide constitutional amendment on their ballot. The League of Women Voters is urging voters to vote no.
A sample of reader opinions sent to us in the closing weeks of the campaign.
During a segment of UpNorthNews Radio, Sen. Baldwin discussed some of the hottest topics on this year’s campaign trail. In this year’s Senate race between Wisconsin Senator Tammy Baldwin and Republican challenger and owner of the Utah-based Sunbank, Eric Hovde,...
They’ll tell you it’s a sign of local overspending, but the truth is that lawmakers have been strangling school districts for more than a decade—choosing to look frugal when they’re really passing the buck to property taxpayers.