BALANCE OF POWER — For more than a decade, Wisconsin has been arguably the most fiercely contested partisan battleground in the nation. Bruising statewide contests and bitter gubernatorial and state legislative recall campaigns have been the norm. In 2016, the state voted for Donald Trump by a razor-thin margin of about 23,000 votes. Four years later, it flipped to Joe Biden by an even tighter margin. Against that polarized backdrop, Wisconsin’s state supreme court election is one of the most important elections taking place in 2023. Voters will go to the polls today in a four-way, nonpartisan primary for an open seat on the seven-member court. The top two finishers will then move on to the April 4 general election for a 10-year term on the court. Nightly spoke with POLITICO’s Zach Montellaro, who covers state-based elections, voting rights and election administration, to better understand a contest that’s been called ‘the most important election nobody’s ever heard of.’ This interview has been edited. What makes this state supreme court election — a primary, no less — so important? At the risk of belittling some of the other states ... first and foremost, the reason why this is so important is the state it is being held in. Wisconsin, as you might have heard, is a politically very important state! On top of that, this election will decide the balance of the court. Conservative-leaning justices currently have a 4-3 majority, with one sorta-swingy conservative justice. The seat that’s up this year will replace a conservative justice. So should a liberal eventually win, it would flip the balance of the court. The position is technically a non-partisan one, judges run without a party affiliation. So the election tonight will whittle the field down from four candidates — two generally liberal jurists, two generally conservative ones — down to two. The all-in primary opens up the possibility that one side gets locked out; that either the two conservatives advance or the two liberals advance. We’ve seen that happen a few times in states like California that also host all-party primaries for elected offices, but most people I’ve talked to in Wisconsin don’t think that that is likely tonight. The top two advance to the general election in April. Tell us a little about the candidates. The two liberal leaning judges are Milwaukee County Judge Janet Protasiewicz and Dane County Judge Everett Mitchell. Protasiewicz has been the big fundraising leader in the race so far, and has picked up a fair amount of support from labor in the state, along with the Democratic powerhouse EMILY’s List. Mitchell, meanwhile, is a pastor as well as a judge, and leans into his role as a community leader. The two conservatives are former state Supreme Court Justice Daniel Kelly and Waukesha County Judge Jennifer Dorow. Kelly was appointed to a seat by then-GOP Gov. Scott Walker in 2016 for the state’s highest court, but lost pretty handily when he was on the ballot in 2020. His pitch is that he’s the known quantity for conservatives in the race — which brings us to Dorow. She wasn’t as well known to many plugged in folks in the state as much as Kelly, and rocketed to prominence after she oversaw the trial last year for the man [who plowed his SUV into the Waukesha Christmas parade in 2021, killing six people and injuring dozens more]. Given the current court composition, it seems like the outcome here could have wide-ranging effects. Are there certain issues that loom especially large? Maybe unsurprisingly given the results of the midterms, but abortion will probably be top of mind for voters for this race. The procedure is illegal in nearly all cases in Wisconsin, and Democrats and liberal orgs will be hammering whatever conservative jurist comes out of the primary over it. The state’s Democratic attorney general has sued to overturn Wisconsin’s 1840s law on abortion, so this could come in front of the court fairly soon. And groups on both sides of the issue told me and a colleague last month that they plan to spend in the state. Redistricting groups will also play heavily in the race as well. Democratic and Republican organizations that are focused on the battle over state lines have been among the biggest spenders in state Supreme Court races in recent years, and I don’t expect that to change in Wisconsin, given that the balance of the court is in play. Lastly, it looks like there will be two GOP-backed measures on the ballot in April that conservatives are hoping will help juice turnout, and will likely tie into the state Supreme Court race. One measure is about an amendment to make it harder for people accused of violent crimes to be released on bail, and another is a purely advisory referendum over whether “able-bodied, childless adults [should] should be required to look for work” to receive welfare benefits. There was a legal fight over it recently but a judge on Monday gave the measures a go-ahead. Since Wisconsin is a key presidential swing state, are there any 2024 implications in this court election? You bet. The most immediate political impact is the state legislative and congressional lines would probably be challenged ahead of 2024, should a liberal win in April. Wisconsin is home to ... many, many fights over its political boundaries. The maps right now heavily favor Republicans there — Republicans have a near-ironclad lock on the statehouse despite it being a close 50-50 state — so Democrats would be eager to challenge those. And I suspect that the Wisconsin state supreme court will be asked to weigh in on state election laws as well ahead of 2024. The court said last year that the use of most drop boxes in the state was verboten last year, for example, and the court overturned an executive order from Democratic Gov. Tony Evers in 2020 that tried to postpone the state’s April elections that year until the summer because of Covid. Perhaps most existentially, let’s not forget about Trump’s failed attempts to overturn the 2020 election (and the possibility that that could happen again). The state Supreme Court in Wisconsin dismissed Trump’s challenge to the election results in the state in 2020 in a 4-3 decision, with Justice Brian Hagedorn — that swingy justice I mentioned earlier — splitting with the rest of the conservative bloc to join liberal jurists to toss the "unreasonable in the extreme" challenge. Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at cmahtesian@politico.com or on Twitter at @PoliticoCharlie.
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