Tag: maria lazar
'Wow Moment' As Wisconsin And Georgia Special Elections Shock Republicans

'Wow Moment' As Wisconsin And Georgia Special Elections Shock Republicans

On Tuesday night, April 7, the top news story was U.S. President Donald Trump agreeing to a two-week ceasefire with Iran after having threatened that "a whole civilization will die tonight" if the regime in Tehran didn't agree to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. The ceasefire, in the United States, overshadowed another news story: elections in Georgia and Wisconsin. And like previous 2026 elections, the result gave Democrats more reason for optimism ahead of the midterms.

Liberal Judge Chris Taylor won a state supreme court race in Wisconsin, defeating GOP-backed Judge Maria S. Lazar by roughly 20 percent. Although the race was technically nonpartisan, Taylor was backed by Democrats and enjoyed a landslide victory.

In a Georgia special election for the U.S. House of Representatives seat once held by former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), Trump-endorsed Republican Clay Fuller won by 15 percent. That district is so deep red, however, that Democrat Shawn Harris' 15 percent was an improvement for his party there.

Politico's Andrew Howard stressed that April 7 was a great night for Democrats. On X, Howard posted, "New: Democrats just had one of their best election nights since President Donald Trump returned to the White House. Again. On Wisconsin and Georgia."

Former GOP strategist Brandon Scholz, who left the Republican Party in 2021, told Politico, "It's a wow moment in Wisconsin politics. Republicans ought to be sitting down tonight and going, 'OK, we just screwed up another race. What are we going to do in November?'"

A current GOP strategist, interviewed by Politico on condition of anonymity, said of Lazar's 20 percent loss and the Wisconsin GOP, "Everyone involved should be doxxed, tarred and feathered and run out of Wisconsin politics. The electorate is so different now. GOP voters don't show up for spring (elections) like they used to."

CJ Warnke of the House Majority PAC — a Democratic super-PAC associated with House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-New York) — told Politico, "Election after election continues to show what we have been saying over the last year and a half. Americans are fed up with broken promises on no new wars and lower prices on Day 1 from Trump and Republicans."

In a listicle published on April 8, the New York Times' Reid J. Epstein offers three takeaways on the Tuesday-night election results: (1) "a big shift in Georgia," (2) "Democrats romp again in a Wisconsin (Supreme) Court election," and (3) "a blue wave lands in crucial Waukesha County," Wisconsin."

Wisconsin is among the swing states that Trump lost in 2020 but won in 2016 and 2024. And Epstein emphasizes that April 7 was a very bad night for Republicans in that key swing state.

"Judge Taylor's 20-point triumph reshaped Wisconsin's election night map," Epstein explains. "All across the state, counties that had voted for Mr. Trump by wide margins turned blue on Tuesday. Perhaps most worrisome for Republicans was the erosion of their votes in Waukesha County, for generations the party's largest source of votes and a place where, as recently as 2012, Mitt Romney won 67 percent of the vote…. Democrats have been organizing in the county for years, hoping to flip some key seats in the (Wisconsin) State Legislature there this fall in their effort to win control of the State Assembly and Senate for the first time since 2010. And in the mayoral race in the City of Waukesha, Alicia Halvensleben, a Democrat on the city's Common Council, defeated State Representative Scott Allen, a Republican, giving Democrats a triumph in the longtime GOP stronghold."

Reprinted with permission from Alternet

'Conservative'? Wisconsin Court Nominee Stumbles On Basic Constitutional History

'Conservative'? Wisconsin Court Nominee Stumbles On Basic Constitutional History

In a recent interview, Maria Lazar, a conservative candidate for the Wisconsin Supreme Court, appeared not to know basic facts about the Dred Scott decision, one of the most pivotal rulings in the history of American jurisprudence.

Lazar currently sits on the Wisconsin Court of Appeals. She is running in the April 17 election to replace retiring conservative Supreme Court Justice Rebecca Bradley.

The Dred Scott decision was an 1857 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that said the Constitution did not grant full citizenship rights to Black people. Lazar pointed to the ruling in an October 1, 2025 radio interview as an example of a case that was wrongly decided but later overturned by the court.

“Precedent doesn’t mean that you never overturn a case,” Lazar said. “I mean, there are cases, for example, Dred Scott and some other appalling cases that the U.S. Supreme Court issued that deservedly should have been overturned.”

There’s just one problem: the court never overturned the Dred Scott decision. Instead, it was effectively nullified by new amendments to the Constitution: the 13th Amendment abolishing slavery, the 14th Amendment extending full citizenship rights to Black people, and the 15th Amendment prohibiting the government from infringing a citizen’s right to vote.

The Wisconsin Supreme Court is currently composed of four liberals and three conservatives. The upcoming April 7 election will determine whether the liberal majority becomes more entrenched, or remains unchanged. The court will likely hear a case on congressional redistricting once the new judge is seated.

Lazar’s liberal opponent is Wisconsin Court of Appeals Judge Chris Taylor. Taylor has been endorsed by Sen. Tammy Baldwin and the AFL-CIO.

Reprinted with permission from American Journal News

Shop our Store

Headlines

Editor's Blog

Corona Virus

Trending

World