Here and Now
McCoshen & Ross on the Significance of Wisconsin's 2025 Vote
Clip: Season 2300 Episode 2338 | 6m 36sVideo has Closed Captions
Bill McCoshen and Scot Ross on the outcome of the 2025 Wisconsin Supreme Court election.
"Here & Now" political panelists Bill McCoshen and Scot Ross discuss the outcome of the 2025 Wisconsin Supreme Court election, from the impact of Elon Musk to upcoming cases before the high court.
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Here and Now is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin
Here and Now
McCoshen & Ross on the Significance of Wisconsin's 2025 Vote
Clip: Season 2300 Episode 2338 | 6m 36sVideo has Closed Captions
"Here & Now" political panelists Bill McCoshen and Scot Ross discuss the outcome of the 2025 Wisconsin Supreme Court election, from the impact of Elon Musk to upcoming cases before the high court.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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>> Thank you.
>> What a week.
A barn burner of a state Supreme Court election, followed up by head spinning Trump tariffs, all as the beat goes on with Elon Musk and Doge within the administration.
Here to discuss our political analysts.
Republican Bill McCoshen and Democrat Scot Ross.
And thanks for being here.
>> Thanks for having us.
>> So, Scott, how big of a gift was Elon Musk to Susan Crawford's campaign?
>> Well, I think he certainly didn't help things.
But this was about Trump, you know.
And when Trump finally gets tired of Musk and dumps him, the failure, the incompetence, the authoritarianism, the rejection of the rule of law, the stealing away of people's money in their retirement accounts, that's this anger is going to going to continue.
It's going to continue into 2026.
But again, I don't think that the I don't think that Musk helped the cause.
I mean, granted, he and E line and you know Hendricks, they spent a fortune to try and win this seat, but they didn't because Democrats, independents and even some Republicans stood up and said, what's going on with the Trump administration does not work for Wisconsin.
>> Bill, do you think that the entry of Musk and Donald Trump into Brad Schimel campaign was a good idea?
>> Part of it.
But I want to pick up on something, Scott said.
First, Democrats were motivated.
They were angry.
They were pretty beaten down in November when Trump won.
I don't think they ever thought that was possible.
It was possible.
Trump not only won here, but he got the most votes in history in the state of Wisconsin.
So Democrats here did all they could to make sure that their base turned out.
Turnout was very high.
It was it was gubernatorial levels.
2.4 million people, which in a spring election is unheard of.
I thought the higher turnout actually would help.
Brad Schimel it helped Democrats more on the Musks thing.
I think without his money, Schimel would have lost by worse.
I think it might have been 14 or 15 points.
I think where there were where Musk's team crossed the line was on giving away checks that didn't sit well with Wisconsin voters, and it super fired up Democrats at the end.
I was at the Musk event in green Bay.
There were probably 400 protesters outside that event in sleeting rain.
And it was they were fired up.
>> Yeah, I mean, those people better cash those checks quick, you know, because they most likely won't be able to be cashed.
But, you know, the thing about it is, if you look at the numbers, literally every single of the 72 counties in Wisconsin went more Democratic, went more left than they did in November 24th.
And this was not a special election.
This was a regularly scheduled election.
We had turnout that was higher than 38, 38 states.
Off year turnout last time.
Like it was a it was a pasting.
It was so, so much of a pasting that like I don't know Derrick Van Orden wasn't drunk yet and Chuck Schumer was still awake.
Republican turnout was up.
It just wasn't up as much as Democrats.
independents were there with with the Democrats on this one.
>> Do you think that follows through?
>> Absolutely.
Because it's not going to get any better.
We just saw with what's going on in three, $30 trillion of wealth being shot out the window with the Trump tariff tax tax going, it's not going to get any worse.
People are looking at their retirement accounts now, you know, if you're Bill's age, you can put $8,000 in your IRA.
Other people, it's 7000.
And people are seeing years and years of the money they invested in their IRA wiped out like that.
>> Spring elections don't correlate to what happens in the fall.
Give you the example.
Janet Protasiewicz won by ten points, which is exactly what Susan Crawford won in 2023, in the spring.
Donald Trump came back and won in 2024.
>> There's that.
>> Yeah, but this is an off year election in 20 in 2026.
And Democrats are going to be motivated and independents are what's going on with the economy and how badly things are going.
>> I want to bring this to you, Bill.
Wisconsin conservative Rick Esenberg said this quote, I'm not surprised that populist voters didn't care about having a conservative court.
They aren't conservative.
They are, rightly or wrongly, resentful and alienated.
What it takes to attract the populist vote limits the conservative vote.
How do you navigate this?
>> Well, we got some soul searching to do on our side, whether it's the state party or the ally groups, and there are many that have been helping Republican candidates.
Everything we did wasn't enough.
And it wasn't enough by a lot.
When you lose by ten points, it's not just one thing.
It's multiple things.
So I think the party's got to do some soul searching on where we go from here to Esenberg Point.
He's right.
There are low propensity voters that do turn out for Donald Trump, but they also turn out for Donald Trump's agenda.
I think where Republicans came up short, particularly in the Supreme Court race, is Brad Schimel wasn't clear enough about what his agenda was, what he what he stood for.
And the Marquette poll in March told us 80% of Wisconsin voters actually want to know what judicial candidates position is on issues, which I find sort of appalling, but that's where the public is.
They want to know where you stand.
These are no longer nonpartisan races.
They're very partizan.
>> A sea.
>> This isn't this race was not about some fracture between two parts of the Republican Trump Party.
This was about Democrats, independents, and even some Republicans going out and saying, we reject what Donald Trump's doing.
They have taken over government.
There needs to be a check on them.
That check needs to be Susan Crawford, and it's not going to get any easier for the Republicans.
And if you think about, like, what the next race is, you know, April 2026, Rebecca Bradley, the best chance that Republicans have is if she gets a federal judgeship and Toni Evers Governor Evers gets to appoint a successor because she is so toxic, she is more toxic than even Brad Schimel or Dan Kelly.
>> Do you want to respond to that?
and that's the kind of candidate we need a we need a female candidate.
B we need somebody who's tough as nails that's willing to fight for the job.
>> So with about a minute and a half left, how seismic was Crawford's win?
Given what's about to come before the court?
>> Well, it preserves a Liberal majority for three more years.
Republicans or conservatives cannot get the majority again until the spring.
Actually, the summer of 2028.
So what will be will be now for three years minimum.
And that includes school choice.
It includes act ten.
It includes a variety of voter ID, thankfully is no longer under consideration because the voters overwhelmingly passed that.
But there are a lot of things that will come before the court.
And if you're a business owner here in the state of Wisconsin, buckle up.
Could get rough.
>> Listen, there have been freedoms under assault in Wisconsin for the 15 years that Republicans controlled the Supreme Court.
Now that we have, you know, serious justices in there who will look at the law and not interpret the law, I think we're going to have a lot more a lot more cases coming before the court in a way that's going to preserve freedom here
Ben Wikler on National Implications of Crawford's Victory
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Clip: S2300 Ep2338 | 5m 41s | Ben Wikler on the 2025 Wisconsin Supreme Court election and impacts on national politics. (5m 41s)
Here & Now opening for April 4, 2025
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Clip: S2300 Ep2338 | 1m 2s | The introduction to the April 4, 2025 episode of Here & Now. (1m 2s)
Missy Hughes on Trump's Reciprocal Tariffs and Wisconsin
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Clip: S2300 Ep2338 | 6m 3s | Missy Hughes on the Trump administration's reciprocal tariffs and retaliatory tariffs. (6m 3s)
Racine Unified School District Passes 2025 Budget Referendum
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Clip: S2300 Ep2338 | 31s | Voters in the Racine Unified School District passed a $190 million referendum in 2025. (31s)
Recapping the 2025 Wisconsin Supreme Court Election
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Clip: S2300 Ep2338 | 4m 25s | Susan Crawford's win in 2025 secures a liberal majority on the Wisconsin Supreme Court. (4m 25s)
Underly Comments on Her 2025 Superintendent Election Victory
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Clip: S2300 Ep2338 | 1m 55s | Superintendent Jill Underly and Brittany Kinser shared thoughts on education in Wisconsin. (1m 55s)
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