A lawsuit in battleground Wisconsin seeks to legalize a once-popular practice of fusion voting, where the same candidate could appear on the ballot as nominated by multiple political parties.
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A little background information, as I've recounted a few times on Lemmy: Back in the '90s, UW-Madison professor Joel Rogers co-founded an aspirational new political party—creatively named the New Party—that tried to revive fusion voting. They endorsed a Democratic candidate for the Minnesota House in 1994, and the Minnesota DFL objected. They took the case to the Supreme Court, which upheld the ban on fusion voting. The New Party lost momentum and fell apart soon afterwards. Progressive Dane, based in Madison, is the only remaining New Party affiliate.
It's not surprising to see the Wisconsin Republican Party objecting to the practice; it will be interesting to see what the Wisconsin Democratic Party thinks. (I recently learned from the Wikipedia page on fusion voting that the Republicans and Democrats used to run fusion candidates to defeat socialists in Milwaukee.)
The Wisconsin Supreme Court has ruled that the Democratic governor legally used the state’s uniquely powerful veto to lock in a school funding increase for 400 years.
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The partial veto that the Wisconsin governor can do is ridiculous. But it was ridiculous back when Tommy Thompson was doing it, too. If Republicans can use it, so can Democrats.
A former Wisconsin Supreme Court justice who spread election conspiracies and led an investigation into President Donald Trump's loss in the 2020 election has agreed to surrender his law license for three years to settle allegations he violated multiple rules of conduct during the probe.
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In a sliver of good news for today, Michael Gableman faces consequences.
I guess that every election now will have a referendum to amend the state constitution for funsies. Let's add Chapter 1 of the statutes—Sovereignty and Jurisdiction of the State—since that seems pretty important. Maybe the state symbols? I mean, nothing's more patriotic than the American Robin. Let's get the lyrics to "On, Wisconsin!" in there, too. That, and the 2025 Green Bay Packers schedule definitely should be in the constitution, and we can add 2026 next year.
Now that it's an open ledger, what other random crap should we put into our foundational document?
Hey there, so I just saw that Wisconsin DMV has started warning residents about these phishing texts.
I'm just curious have you heard anything else about issues with stolen data or anything like that from the Wisconsin DMV?
Louisiana had an incident a few years ago where state government servers were hacked, and then a few years later pretty much every adult in LA had their data breached by a cyber attack at the Office of Motor Vehicles (OMV).
We never heard much else about it, but on the 20th of March the current governor reissued the state of emergency for the incident, gave the director of the governors office of Homeland security and emergency Preparedness (GOHSEP) the authority to handle it, then moved GOHSEP under the National guard and named a Louisiana guardsman interim director of GOHSEP. There's been continuing weirdness around it since, but not much detail.
Just wondering if there's any connection between the two. Seems like odd timing to be getting the message from
Wisconsin Democratic Party Chair Ben Wikler has accused Elon Musk of felony vote buying and he has called for the billionaire's arrest if he comes to the state.
Billionaire Elon Musk says a Wisconsin voter has been awarded $1 million just days before the conclusion of a fiercely contested state Supreme Court election.
I saw someone on Mastodon mentioning Musk and the Wisconsin election and decided to do a quick dive into Wisconsin government to get things started.
Anyone from Wisconsin (or anywhere) that sees this please feel free to take the wheel and pick up where I leave off, or go somewhere else completely. The point of this is just to give you an example of how easy it is to find the corruption links in the massive SPN network.
So starting from scratch and knowing nothing about Wisconsin politics:
Wisconsin here's your SPN (and totally not the Heritage Foundation 😉) small government loving affiliate:
Ben Wikler and HCR lay out the case that investing volunteer time and donations in the Wisconsin Supreme Court Race is of the utmost importance to counter the $10M+ in spend by Elon and the Uihleins as this is likely a pivotal race for the WI congressional maps in 2026 and 2028.
Sanders thanked his audience for an "unbelievable turnout" and encouraged Republican Rep. Bryan Steil, who represents Wisconsin's 1st Congressional District, to hold a town hall meeting in the same arena at a later date.
Quad/Graphics Inc., which still relies heavily on revenue from commercial printing, anticipates a fourth consecutive year of sales declines in 2025 as sales and profits face headwinds including a postal rate increase and possible tariffs on paper from Canada.
The Sussex-based printing and marketing firm (NYSE: QUAD) continues diversifying its business from shrinking commercial printing segments, such as magazines and newspaper inserts, to higher-margin targeted print products and Quad’s marketing and advertising businesses.
Quad executives told analysts and investors in late 2024 the company would see continued sales declines until 2027 or 2028, when revenue is expected to increase and cash flow to improve.
For the near term, the company last week increased its quarterly dividend by 50% to 7.5 cents per share per quarter, or 30 cents per share annually.
Chairman and CEO Joel Quadracci told analysts Thursday that Quad expects U.S. postal rate increases to continue outpacing
The parent company of PyraMax Bank is voluntarily delisting from the Nasdaq and transitioning to trade over the counter in an effort to reduce expenses.
1895 Bancorp of Wisconsin Inc. (Nasdaq: BCOW) said it would be withdrawing the registration of its common stock with the Securities and Exchange Commission, according to a press release.
The bank has been public for about three and a half years, with its listing on the Nasdaq starting in July 2021, the culmination of a conversion project the former mutual savings bank began early that year.
Mutual savings banks are owned by their depositors, not outside shareholders, as the bank was once it transitioned.
BCOW's stock started out trading with a share price over $15 but within days settled down to trading between $10 and $11, a level it stayed at until March 2023.
The stock was generally selling for less than $10 a share until October 2024, when it returned to that level, where it has stayed. On Wednesday, it closed at $9