Democratic-backed judge wins Wisconsin race in setback for Elon Musk

1 day ago 7

Nomia Iqbal in Milwaukee & Max Matza

BBC News

Wisconsin voters have elected a Democratic-backed judge to serve on the state supreme court, according to projections, following the most expensive judicial election in US history.

Susan Crawford is on course to beat conservative rival Brad Schimel, which would keep intact the 4-3 liberal dominance of the Midwestern state's highest court.

President Donald Trump's billionaire adviser Elon Musk was a prominent fundraiser in the campaign, and was the subject of attack ads aired by Crawford's supporters. More than $100m (£77m) was spent by the candidates and their allies.

The result is expected to have far reaching implications, going beyond just state law and potentially even affecting the balance of power in the US Congress.

With more than three-quarters of ballots tallied, Crawford had won about 55% of the vote, and Schimel had around 45%.

Tuesday's result was a setback for Trump in a crucial presidential swing state that he won by less than a percentage point last November.

However, he may be consoled by his fellow Republicans managing to hold on to two congressional seats in Florida elections on Tuesday.

Earlier in the day in a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump reiterated his support for "patriot" Schimel.

He called Crawford "one of the most Liberal Judges ever elected, which would be a DISASTER for Wisconsin", and said she had a "History of letting child molesters and rapists off easy".

The judicial contest was seen as a test of Musk's powerbroking status. The SpaceX and Tesla boss travelled to the state to give out millions of dollars to voters who pledged to support conservative causes.

In the city of Milwaukee, which leans Democratic, officials reported a shortage of ballots on Tuesday "due to unprecedented and historic voter turnout", the city's election commission said in a statement.

"We are working diligently to replenish ballots," the statement said, advising voters to remain in the queue to cast ballots, even after polls closed at 20:00 local time.

Wisconsin separately voted on Tuesday to enshrine into the state constitution a law requiring voters to show ID to cast their ballots.

Voters were already required to show ID, but adding it to the state constitution made it harder to change in the future. Crawford had opposed the voter ID constitutional amendment.

Wisconsin's supreme court is expected to play a key role in several upcoming cases, including laws around abortion and congressional redistricting ahead of Midterm elections in 2026 and the next presidential election, in 2028.

At an NBA game in Milwaukee on Tuesday, several voters spoke to the BBC about their concerns for the election.

Milwaukee Bucks fan Mike McClain said he was motivated by a dislike for Musk, who he referred to as "the real president".

"I don't know how a billionaire, almost a trillionaire, can decide what's going on," he said. "You can't even relate with common people."

A Schimel supporter who did want to give his name said he was supporting the conservative out of loyalty to Trump.

"We got to take it back home here and reinforce everything that Donald Trump has done," he said.

Much of the liberal campaign focused on the role played by Musk in the Department of Government Efficiency, a cost-cutting task force that has moved to fire thousands of government workers and slash the federal payroll.

During a rally on Sunday, Musk distributed two $1m cheques to voters at a rally who signed his petition against "activist judges".

Others who signed it received $100 from Musk.

On Tuesday, Musk's political action committee added that it would pay $50 to anyone who snapped a picture of a Wisconsin resident standing outside a polling site and holding a photo of Schimel.

Musk donated more than a quarter billion dollars to help elect Trump. He held similar $1m giveaways to boost the Republican president's campaign.

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