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Local elections were not the only ones affected by the union tumult. A sleepy state Supreme Court race exploded into a competitive and closely watched contest after a liberal prosecutor tried to unseat a conservative incumbent. The challenger's supporters worked to frame the vote as a referendum on Walker's proposals. The debate is unlikely to end anytime soon. Recall attempts are under way against eight Democratic and eight Republican state senators. Those efforts, along with the legal challenge to the law, are sure to stir the controversy for months to come. Walker's office has consistently rejected any notion that the governor's plans affected other elections. Spokesman Chris Schrimpf insists those races were about different candidates and issues entirely. In the state's southeast corner, Racine County Supervisor Ken Hall introduced a resolution asking Walker to back off the union changes at the height of Hall's race for county executive post against Jim Ladwig, whose mother served in the Wisconsin Assembly as a Republican alongside Walker. Ladwig ended up winning. "I know, at times, people may have tried to make it that way, but I don't think (collective bargaining) was a major issue," Ladwig said. Schmitt, the winner in the Green Bay mayor's race, said his race against Evans was about fiscal responsibility and economic development, not union rights. "I don't know what Pat's talking about," he said. "People were asking about collective bargaining ... (but) that wasn't the big issue to me." Evans complained early and often about his opponent's decision to build a replica of Elvis's favorite roller coaster, the Zippin Pippin, at a cost of $3.5 million at the city's amusement park. But, he said, the collective bargaining storm sucked the oxygen out of his run. "When you have (only) so much news time, so much space, and it's being used to talk about the chaos in Madison versus the chaos in Green Bay, it does take away," Evans said. "I've never seen people so up in arms. I had to get involved with a topic I didn't need to be involved with."
[Associated
Press;
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