Susan Crawford and Brad Schimel bring their political histories — and partisan backers —to the race for the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
One of the most outspoken officers who defended the U.S. Capitol against rioters on Jan. 6, 2021, is emphasizing President Donald Trump's pardons in Wisconsin's high profile Supreme Court race.
Brad Schimel says he oversaw mass testing of sexual assault kits while attorney general. Susan Crawford says he took too long.
Conservative candidate Brad Schimel refuses to criticize the president for freeing rioters who assaulted law enforcement officers.
The Republican-backed candidate in Wisconsin’s pivotal state Supreme Court race says he thinks anyone convicted of assaulting law enforcement officers should serve their entire sentence.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court general election set to be held in April will determine ideological control of the court.
Although officially nonpartisan, state Supreme Court candidates line up with either the Democratic or Republican parties in their campaigns.
Wisconsin Watch partners with Gigafact to produce fact briefs — bite-sized fact checks of trending claims. Read our methodology to learn how we check claims. Brad Schimel reached a plea bargain with a criminal defendant whose attorney made donations to Schimel’s election campaign.
Both candidates are also accepting large donations from partisans, including the Democratic and Republican parties.
Harry Dunn criticizes efforts to "whitewash" the violent U.S. Capitol insurrection as well as the pardons granted to hundreds who took part.
By Peter Cameron, THE BADGER PROJECT Waukesha County Circuit Court Judge and former Wisconsin Attorney General Brad Schimel raised more than $2 million through the end of 2024, according to mandatory campaign finance filings with the state. By comparison ...
Supreme Court candidate Brad Schimel has touted the endorsement of the Chippewa County Sheriff, who has been accused of sexual harassment