Abortion rights at stake in Wisconsin Supreme Court election
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[February 21, 2023]
By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - Wisconsin voters on Tuesday will decide which state Supreme
Court candidates will advance to an April election that carries profound
consequences for abortion rights, control of the state government and
the 2024 presidential election.
Four candidates – two liberals and two conservatives – are on the
ballot, with the top two finishers moving on to a one-on-one matchup in
April that will determine whether a right-wing or left-wing majority
controls the state's seven-member high court.
The newly constituted court will likely decide whether to uphold the
state's 1849 near-total abortion ban that took effect after the U.S.
Supreme Court's decision last June to overturn Roe v. Wade, eliminating
a national right to abortion.
The court may also reexamine the state's Republican-drawn legislative
maps, which have helped the party maintain dominance over the
legislature despite a closely divided electorate. And the justices could
issue election law rulings that affect the outcome of the 2024
presidential race, when Wisconsin is expected to be a swing state.
"The stakes in this race for Wisconsin and for American democracy at
large can't be overstated," Ben Wikler, the chair of the state's
Democratic Party, said in an interview.
With a Democratic governor, Tony Evers, and a Republican-majority
legislature often at loggerheads, the state Supreme Court's 4-3
conservative majority has issued a string of decisions that typically
favored Republicans.
But a conservative justice is leaving the bench this year, putting the
political leaning of the court in question.
While the race is technically nonpartisan, a casual observer would be
forgiven for missing that detail. The candidates – liberals Janet
Protasiewicz and Everett Mitchell and conservatives Daniel Kelly and
Jennifer Dorow – have left little doubt about their ideological
tendencies.
Both the state Democratic and Republican parties have lined up behind
each pair of like-minded candidates, while a constellation of interest
groups have issued endorsements and poured millions of dollars into the
campaigns.
The contest already ranks among the most expensive state supreme court
races in history, according to Douglas Keith, an attorney at New York
University's Brennan Center for Justice who tracks spending on judicial
elections.
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Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Daniel
Kelly speaks at a leadership training session for local Republican
Party officials and volunteers in Waukesha, Wisconsin, U.S.,
September 7, 2019. Picture taken September 7, 2019. REUTERS/Brian
Snyder/File Photo
More than $7 million has been spent on television advertising with
six weeks before the general election, putting it on track to
shatter the $15 million overall spending record for a single-seat
race, set in 2004 in Illinois.
State judicial elections have received greater attention in recent
years, a trend accelerated by the Supreme Court's decision to
overturn Roe v. Wade.
In Wisconsin, the ruling triggered the 19th-century law banning the
procedure. Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul filed a lawsuit
claiming the statute is invalid - a case eventually headed for the
state Supreme Court.
"This is Wisconsin's Roe moment," said Gracie Skogman, a
spokesperson for Wisconsin Right to Life, which is backing the
conservative candidates. "It's not only the fate of our current law
that is in jeopardy depending on the ideological makeup of the
court, but they have the opportunity to set the standard for
pro-life and abortion policy for decades to come."
Right to Life is mobilizing voters with direct mail, phone calls,
social media appeals and a voter registration drive.
Planned Parenthood Advocates of Wisconsin plans to invest more
resources in the campaign than any previous judicial race,
spokesperson Tiffany Wynn said. The group has hired staff to canvass
door-to-door and is planning an advertising blitz after Tuesday's
primary.
A new liberal majority could also revisit other statutes, such as
laws requiring voter identification and permitting concealed carry
of firearms.
"These are issues right up and down the line that we've been
tackling over the last generation that would be on the chopping
block," said Mark Jefferson, the Republican state party chair.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; editing by Paul Thomasch and Jonathan
Oatis)
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