Tuesday, October 21, 2025
Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Milwaukee Press Club 'Excellence in Wisconsin Journalism' 2020, 2021, 2022 & 2023 Triple GOLD Award Recipients

Yearly Archives: 2024

Can Republicans Win Statewide Elections Again? [WRN Voices]

In November of 2010, Republicans elected Senator Ron Johnson, Governor Scott Walker, and majorities to the state senate and assembly. That year we also...

NEW RECORD: 371,000 Illegal Border Crossers in December, Most in US History

There were 371,036 foreign nationals reported to have illegally entered the U.S. nationwide in December, the largest number for the month in U.S. history.

There were 302,034 foreign nationals who illegally entered the southwest land border, with the majority, 249,785, being apprehended between ports of entry, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data. By comparison, 73,414 illegal border crossers were apprehended at the southwest border in December 2021.

There were 15,349 foreign nationals apprehended illegally entering at the northern land border last month, the highest for the month in U.S. history, according to the data. By comparison, there were 2,205 apprehensions at the northern border in December 2021.

The data excludes gotaways, those who illegally enter and intentionally evade capture by law enforcement, which CBP doesn’t publicly report. When included, the totals are much higher. From Jan. 1, 2021, to Sept. 30, 2023, there were an estimated 1.7 million gotaways to have illegally entered the U.S., The Center Square exclusively reported. Ultimately, law enforcement officials say they have no idea how many gotaways there are in the U.S., or who or where they are.

The overwhelming majority of illegal border crossers, including gotaways, are single adults, with the majority of them being single military age men, The Center Square has previously reported.

Retired FBI counter intelligence leaders recently sounded the alarm, warning that these unvetted men pose a terrorist threat. They also said President Joe Biden’s border policies have facilitated a “soft invasion” into the U.S. of military-age men coming from terror-linked regions, including China and Russia. “In its modern history the U.S. has never suffered an invasion of the homeland, and, yet, one is unfolding now,” they said.

The U.S. House of Representatives is expected to soon impeach him for failing to uphold his oath of office, as the House Committee on Homeland Security Committee Chairman has repeatedly argued, Mayorkas is “derelict in his duty” to protect the homeland.

Requiring Competitive Bids on Wisconsin School Construction Projects Is Long Overdue [WRN Voices]

When was the last time the government did less of something? We’re used to nothing but more—more inflation, more debt, and more spending, particularly under...

Brown County Public Health Renames Breast Feeding ‘Chest Feeding’

The Brown County, Wisconsin, Public Health office has renamed "breast feeding" chest feeding. In the same post, Brown County's Public Health department referred to mothers...

State Senator Lena Taylor Named Milwaukee County Judge

(The Center Square) – Lena Taylor is leaving the Wisconsin Senate to a chorus of kind words.

Gov. Tony Evers on Friday named Taylor as a Milwaukee County Circuit Court judge.

“Sen. Taylor is a committed public servant who has dedicated her life to pursuing justice for her community and the people of Wisconsin,” Evers said. “I am confident that she will serve the people of Milwaukee County well as a circuit court judge.”

Taylor was first elected to the State Assembly in 2003, and then to the State Senate two years later.

Taylor resigned her Senate seat Friday and will start as a judge Tuesday.

“It has been the honor of a lifetime to serve the people of the 4th Senate and the 18th Assembly Districts, over the course of my 20-year tenure with the Wisconsin State Legislature. It has, also, been a pleasure to work with my colleagues, staff, state employees and the dedicated Capitol employees, that made it possible for me to serve my constituents,” Taylor said in a statement. “As I prepare for the next phase in my journey of public service, I must admit this feels like a full circle moment. I began my career as a public defender and then private practice attorney. Even in running for public office, the goal of justice reform, accountable and responsive systems, has always been my priority.”

Taylor is leaving with high praise, from both her fellow Democrats and Republicans.

“I will miss working with my friend, Sen. Lena Taylor. Although we come from different backgrounds and political philosophies, Lena and I were able to work together more often than not, as we did on improving policing. Never at a loss for (a lot) of words, Lena was a passionate advocate for Milwaukee and her beliefs,” Republican Sen. Van Wanggaard, R-Racine, said Friday. “Even when we weren’t able to reach an agreement, we were often able to reach an understanding. I look forward to working with her in her new capacity as a member of the judiciary.”

“Sen Taylor is a fierce and effective advocate for the people of Milwaukee and her dedication to her community is unmatched. I am confident that the Senator will diligently fulfill the duties of a Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge because of her equitable pursuit of justice and commitment to the truth,” Senate Democratic Leader Diane Hesselbein said in a statement of her own. “It has been an honor to serve with Senator Taylor throughout my time in the State Legislature and I salute this excellent choice by Gov. Evers.”

Taylor’s new job opens a seat in the Wisconsin Senate and opens a spot to run under what will likely be new political maps later this year.

Becoming a judge also means a significant pay raise.

Wisconsin lawmakers make a little more than $57,000 a-year. Taylor will make a little more than $164,000 a-year.

Trump Vows Appeal After Jury Orders Him to Pay $83.3 Million in Defamation Case

A jury on Friday ordered former President Donald Trump to pay $83.3 million in damages to a writer who accused him of him of ruining her reputation by denying he raped her in 1995 or 1996.

The jury awarded $18.3 million in compensatory damages and $65 million in punitive damages. That's far more than the $10 million writer E. Jean Carroll had sought.

Carroll sued Trump in 2019 after he denied that he had raped her in 1995 or 1996 in a Bergdorf Goodman dressing room.

Trump had said he never met Carroll. His attorneys argued Carroll had sought fame and attention. Trump said she made up the story to boost sales of her memoir.

Trump said Friday's verdict was a sign the nation's legal system was broken.

"Absolutely ridiculous!," he wrote on Truth Social. "I fully disagree with both verdicts, and will be appealing this whole Biden Directed Witch Hunt focused on me and the Republican Party. Our Legal System is out of control, and being used as a Political Weapon. They have taken away all First Amendment Rights. THIS IS NOT AMERICA!"

In May 2023, a jury found Trump liable for $5 million in damages for sexually abusing Carroll and calling her a liar. In that trial, Carroll testified that Trump raped her and then defamed her by calling her a liar in a 2022 post on Truth Social, his social media platform. That jury found Carroll failed to prove that Trump raped her, but proved that Trump sexually assaulted her.

Trump, 77, is leading in the primary race for the GOP nomination to challenge incumbent President Joe Biden.

Carroll's civil case is among the many legal challenges Trump faces as he campaigns. He faces 91 felony charges in four criminal cases.

Trump has said the legal challenges amount to a politically charged witch hunt designed to interfere with his bid to re-take the White House.

The Washington D.C. trial, one of the two federal criminal cases, is set to start March 4. Special Counsel Jack Smith's team of federal prosecutors charged Trump with four federal counts related to contesting the 2020 election and the storming of the U.S. Capitol building on Jan. 6, 2021. The charges include conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding, conspiracy to defraud the United States, obstruction, and conspiracy against the right to vote and to have one's vote counted, according to the indictment. Trump has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

After that is Trump's New York state criminal case, set to start on March 25. In that case, Trump pleaded not guilty in April to 34 felony counts related to charges he paid hush money to adult film star Stormy Daniels through a lawyer before the 2016 presidential election and covered it up as a legal expense before being elected president.

Then comes the scheduled start of the classified documents case in Florida on May 20. In that case, Trump has pleaded not guilty to 40 felony counts that allege he kept sensitive military documents, shared them with people who didn't have security clearance, and tried to thwart the government's attempts to get them back.

The final one is Trump's Georgia criminal trial is set for Aug. 4. In that case, Trump stands accused of trying to interfere in the state's 2020 election. He has pleaded not guilty.

‘POTUS & Tammy’: Gov. Evers’ Spokesperson Compares Tammy Baldwin to Joe Biden

Gov. Tony Evers' spokesperson says U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin is similar to President Joe Biden. That comparison, although accurate, seems to be a politically risky...

The Face of Concealed Carry Has Changed in Wisconsin [WRN Voices]

In a recent column for WRN, Brandon Maly suggested that winning back Wisconsin’s blue areas was the path to victory for Republicans in Wisconsin....

Creating a Deep Conservative Bench in Dane County, Other Elections [WRN Voices]

As the upcoming Presidential Primary looms, attention rightly centers on the federal government. The televised debates have provided some education (and entertainment) as we...

Trump, Republican Governors Back Abbott’s Defense of the Border

Twenty-five Republican governors said Thursday they back Texas Gov. Greg Abbott's decision to defend the state's border with Mexico.

Abbott invoked the invasion clause of the U.S. Constitution on Wednesday and said the federal government broke its compact with the states.

The "Guarantee Clause" of the U.S. Constitution (Article IV, Section 4) "promises that the federal government 'shall protect each [State] against invasion." Fifty-one Texas counties have declared an invasion, citing an imminent threat created by transnational criminal organizations bringing in enough fentanyl to kill the entire state's population, and expressing support to defend Texas' sovereignty.

The governors said they support Abbott.

"Because the Biden administration has abdicated its constitutional compact duties to the states, Texas has every legal justification to protect the sovereignty of our states and our nation," the governors said.

The Biden administration sued Texas over the placement of wire barriers at the border in Eagle Pass. The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday reversed a decision by a lower court that stopped the federal government from removing the wire.

Abbott has ordered the Texas National Guard to continue building the wire barriers.

"We stand in solidarity with our fellow Governor, Greg Abbott, and the State of Texas in utilizing every tool and strategy, including razor wire fences, to secure the border," the governors said in a statement. "We do it in part because the Biden Administration is refusing to enforce immigration laws already on the books and is illegally allowing mass parole across America of migrants who entered our country illegally."

Separately, former President Donald Trump also backed Abbott and the state of Texas' response.

"When I was President, we had the most secure Border in History. Joe Biden has surrendered our Border, and is aiding and abetting a massive Invasion of millions of Illegal Migrants into the United States," Trump wrote on Truth Social. "Instead of fighting to protect our Country from this onslaught, Biden is, unbelievably, fighting to tie the hands of Governor Abbott and the State of Texas, so that the Invasion continues unchecked. In the face of this National Security, Public Safety, and Public Health Catastrophe, Texas has rightly invoked the Invasion Clause of the Constitution, and must be given full support to repel the Invasion."

Trump and Biden appear to be headed for a rematch of the 2020 election in November.

The governors' statement is signed by Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey, Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy, Arkansas Gov. Sarah Sanders, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, Idaho Gov. Brad Little, Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry, Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves, Missouri Gov. Mike Parson, Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte, Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen, Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo, New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt, South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster, South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, Utah Gov. Spencer Cox, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice and Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon.

Wisconsin Republicans Say Lower Revenue Estimates Shouldn’t Derail Tax Cut

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin’s budget-makers are expecting less money over the next year but say that shouldn’t stop the state from giving taxpayers some of their money back.

The Legislative Fiscal Bureau released an updated revenue forecast for the state budget that will end in June 2025.

“Based upon our analysis, we project the closing, net general fund balance at the end of this biennium (June 30, 2025) to be $3,152.0 million. This is $439.1 million below the net balance that was projected at the time of enactment of the 2023-25 biennial budget,” the report stated.

Most of that decrease, some $422 million, comes from an expected drop in tax collections.

Sen. Howard Marklein, R-Spring Green, and Rep. Mark Born, R-Beaver Dam, the head of the budget writing Joint Finance Committee said even with the lower estimate, a $3.1 billion surplus is plenty of money to pay for a tax cut for Wisconsinites.

“Earlier this week, Republicans introduced a plan to send over $2 billion to the people of Wisconsin through targeted relief to middle income earners, families, and retirees,” Marklein and Born said in a statement. “Our plan builds on the decade-long practice of returning money to hardworking taxpayers, which has resulted in over $22 billion of savings for Wisconsin individuals, families and businesses. Our budget funded our priorities and met our obligations. Now we must return the excess to taxpayers. These updated revenue estimates show we have the money to do it.”

That proposal would target the tax cut to families who make $150,000 or less.

Marklein and Born said Wisconsin can provide that kind of relief, because of years of Republican budgeting.

“These estimates are consistent with what we expected when we crafted our budget. We created a responsible budget that protects taxpayer resources, while making important investments in our state. A decade of sound fiscal policies have contributed to the continued growth of our state’s economy and state government’s bottom line,” the two added.

In addition to the $3.1 billion surplus, Wisconsin, Marklein and Born said the state has $1.8 billion in its rainy day fund.

UW President Says Students Not Choosing University’s Branch Campuses

(The Center Square) – The president of the University of Wisconsin says young people are not choosing the university’s branch campuses.

President Jay Rothman told a crowd in Milwaukee the demand is simply not there for the UW’s local campuses like it once was.

“We had to accept what was market reality,” Rothman said at an event at the Milwaukee Press Club. “The attendance at those campuses have dropped drastically in the past 10 years, far more than any of our universities. We have to accept consumers aren’t looking at those branch campuses the way they once were.”

Rothman said online options are making things difficult for small, local campuses.

“If you’re in a branch campus, or somewhere hard to reach, online availability has changed the landscape,” Rothman said.

Rothman’s comments came after UW-Green Bay last week said it will end in-person classes at its Marinette campus at the end of the current semester. UW-Milwaukee County ended in-person classes at its Washington County campus, and UW-Oshkosh announced an end to in-person classes at its Fond du Lac campus.

All three campuses have just a few hundred students each this semester.

Rothman said, overall, the entire university system is facing some difficult financial times.

“We are having to make hard choices at some of our campuses including furloughs, buyouts and layoffs,” Rothman said.

He told the Press Club that 10 of the UW’s 13 campuses are all running a deficit this year.

Rothman said he hopes to close those deficits by 2028 but warned it will take more federal money to make that happen.

“We are all focused on the same thing, and that is student success. We have a long way, certainly encountering some headwinds in being successful, but we are going to work through it,” Rothman said.

Texas’ Dispute With Biden Over Border Crisis Escalates

As the conflict between the federal government and Texas escalates over the state's right to defend its border with Mexico, Gov. Greg Abbott is not backing down as a congressional Democrat called on President Joe Biden to federalize the Texas National Guard.

If the Texas National Guard were federalized solely to usurp Abbott’s constitutional authority to secure the Texas border, Congress should consider whether doing so constitutes a high crime and misdemeanor – an impeachable offense – under the U.S. Constitution, a constitutional law expert told The Center Square.

After Abbott invoked his constitutional authority to defend Texas’ border on Wednesday, saying, “The federal government has broken the compact between the United States and the States,” reports surfaced that Biden could federalize the Texas National Guard. This would result in pulling them from the Texas border and breaking the chain of command under Abbott.

Abbott called up several thousand guard members and positioned them at the Texas-Mexico border through his border security mission, Operation Lone Star. After the U.S. Supreme Court this week ruled Border Patrol agents could destroy Texas' concertina wire barriers, Abbott instructed guardsmen to build more.

U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro, a Democrat from San Antonio, said that if Abbott “defies” the Supreme Court’s ruling, Biden “needs to establish sole federal control of the Texas National Guard now.”

The court ruling only addressed Border Patrol agent activity in Eagle Pass, Texas. It did not direct the governor to stop constructing the barriers or to stop enforcing state law.

Texas National Guard troops operating under Title 32 fall under the command of the Texas governor as their commander in chief. If federalized under Title 10, the Guard falls under the command of the president.

“If the Texas National Guard are federalized under Title 10 for the sole purpose of pulling them off the Texas border and out of the chain of command of the Commander in Chief of the Texas military, after Gov. Abbott invoked his constitutional authority to defend the Texas border, the founders would have envisioned this as a crime and misdemeanor and impeachable offense,” Jonathan Hullihan told The Center Square. Hullihan is a constitutional law and national security law expert, a former active duty Navy JAG, and general counsel of Citizens Defending Freedom.

He was among the first to call for Texas to declare an invasion. So far, 51 counties have declared an invasion, nearly 100 counties have issued disaster declarations and invasion declarations, or both, citing the border crisis.

Hullihan also said that federalizing Texas National Guard troops to usurp Abbott’s authority is a different matter than other reasons used to impeach, or attempt to impeach, former presidents because it directly relates to constitutional authority.

“This is not a phone call to Ukraine,” Hullihan said, referring to the U.S. House’s now discredited impeachment of former President Donald Trump. “This is not like having an affair with a White House intern,” he said, referring to a key fact in the impeachment trial of former President Bill Clinton. “This is not like sending your guys to go search for intel in a campaign office,” referring to the Watergate scandal, he told The Center Square.

“Congress should consider if federalizing the Texas National Guard after their Texas commander in chief called them up under constitutional authority for the sole purpose of pulling them out of his chain of command constitutes a high crime and misdemeanor,” Hullihan told The Center Square. “Attempting to violate the authority of the U.S. Constitution could be viewed as an impeachable offense. The founders specifically wrote the U.S. Constitution with safeguards to protect state sovereignty should the federal government fail to protect them.”

Hullihan also reiterated what many Texans have argued: “Congress has failed to act on the border.” After Republican members of Congress held a news conference in Eagle Pass, border residents told The Center Square if Congress continues to use taxpayer dollars to fund policies that facilitate the border crisis, Congress is complicit in creating it and a national security threat.

“The question now is if Congress will defend the U.S. Constitution or not,” Hullihan said. “What’s happening in Texas is above politics and policy. This is about the founding principles of the U.S. Constitution and ensuring the checks and balances put in place will safeguard our constitutional republic and protect the lives, liberty and property of American citizens.

“Fundamentally, the government is charged with ensuring our individual liberty. We cannot allow transnational criminal organizations to operate unimpeded into our open border killing Americans. We have fought wars to defend our border, we must continue to fight today.”

Why Did the GOP Legislature Approve EVERS’ Maps? A PRIMER

Why the heck did the Republican Legislature approve TONY EVERS' maps? A primer... We didn't agree with Republicans in the Legislature voting to approve Evers'...

The Real Threat to Democracy is NOT Donald Trump

It seems that daily we hear from President Biden, Democrats, and the media, that if Donald Trump is elected president, our democracy will die. ...

A Hill to Die On: Why Republicans MUST Reject Evers’ Redistricting Maps

Today, the Republican-controlled state Senate approved Democrat Gov. Tony Evers' redistricting maps which, through many credible scenarios, hand control of the Legislature to Democrats...

Wisconsin Law Enforcement Standards Board Creates Part-time Officer Policy Committee; Meeting Thursday

The Wisconsin Law Enforcement Standards Board (LESB) has created a committee to review its policies as it relates to part-time police officers. Last month, Wisconsin...

Wisconsin Senate, Assembly Are Working on Slightly Redrawn Version of EVERS’ Map

Although the issue is likely to be brought to the floor as the Iowa model bill, state Rep. Pat Snyder expects that the state...

How Evers’ Partisan Map Messes With Incumbent Rep. Pat Snyder, Wausau

The map Gov. Evers' submitted to the liberal-controlled state Supreme Court moves Republican incumbent Pat Snyder out of Wausau by a couple houses and...

EXCLUSIVE: MAJOR Movement Expected on Redistricting Maps Tomorrow in Wisconsin Legislature

There is major - and sudden - movement expected on the redistricting maps Tuesday in the Wisconsin Legislature, Wisconsin Right Now can report. A...

Wisconsin Choice Schools Score Better in Reading & Math, Report Says

(The Center Square) – The latest report on school choice in Wisconsin again shows choice schools outperform public schools in Milwaukee’s biggest cities and rural areas.

The Apples to Apples report from the Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty compares proficiency rates in math and English language arts in public schools, charter schools and private schools part of Wisconsin’s voucher program.

The report says the idea to put “schools on a level playing field to fairly assess education.”

“Each iteration of Apples to Apples has found that private schools in the choice program and many forms of charter schools outperform their traditional public school peers on a level playing field, and this year is no different,” the report states. “But it is important to emphasize that we report all results, whether favorable to school choice or not.”

Those results show some charter schools have occasionally underperformed compared to public schools.

But as a whole, the Apples to Apples report shows choice schools in Milwaukee significantly out-performed Milwaukee Public Schools.

● Students in the Milwaukee Parental Choice Program showed proficiency rates in private choice schools 8.6% higher in English/language arts and 6.9% higher in math on average than proficiency rates in traditional public schools in Milwaukee.

● Milwaukee charter schools students showed 6.9% and 6.5% higher proficiency in ELA and math, respectively, than traditional public schools.

Statewide, that gap between choice schools and traditional public schools was “about 3.1% higher in ELA for students participating in school choice statewide than traditional public-school students. For the first time, proficiency was found to be lower in math.”

The report goes on to highlight that the biggest tell-tale sign of an achievement gap is family income, not race. Though Wisconsin schools continue to see a large racial achievement gap.

“Statewide, a school with 100% low-income students would be expected to have proficiency rates 47.3% lower in ELA and 45.2% lower in math compared to a hypothetical school with zero low-income students,” the authors wrote. “For African American students, that gap is 23% in ELA and 26% in math. Hispanic students have an achievement gap of approximately 6.7% in math, but no significant gap was found in ELA.”

Rural schools, the report notes, continue to struggle.

“On average, proficiency in Wisconsin’s rural schools is significantly lower in both ELA and math than urban, suburban, or town schools,” the report states.

There are no quick fixes, according to the Apples to Apples report, but the authors say there’s a chance for Wisconsin students to do better.

“There may be a glimmer of hope for improvement in ELA with the passage of a bipartisan reading bill during the most recent legislative session,” the report adds in its conclusion. “In the coming years, it will be interesting to follow whether the implementation of this bill leads to improvement in reading across the state. In the meantime, educational options like private school choice and charter schools continue to provide an important alternative.”

Inflationary Woes: More Chain Stores Closed in 2023, Continuing into 2024

More chain stores closed in 2023 as a result of high inflationary costs, with the trend continuing in 2024 led by the iconic department store, Macy’s.

In 2023, retail stores, pharmaceutical and fast-food chains continued a trend of previous years: declaring bankruptcy and closing their doors or shutting down some locations to cut costs, citing inflation, higher costs, and profit losses.

Last May, discount retailer Tuesday Morning announced it was closing its doors nationwide after being in business for 49 years. Home goods chain Christmas Tree Shops filed for bankruptcy and liquidated all of its stores as did the largest bridal-store chain in the U.S., David's Bridal, laying off tens of thousands of employees.

Sears, once the largest retailer in the world with more than 700 stores in the U.S., shuttered hundreds of locations. Now, only 12 stores remain open.

New York-based specialty athletic retailer Foot Locker also announced it was closing 400 stores in North America by 2026, after reporting sales, gross margins and net income losses.

Pharmaceutical giants CVS and Walgreens also closed stores as cost-cutting measures. CVS announced it planned to close 900 locations by the end of 2026; with store closures came diluted earnings per share for shareholders. After reporting over $170 million in earnings losses, Walgreens announced it was closing 450 stores to cut costs.

Fast food chains Pizza Hut and Boston Market also closed locations in multiple states, with Boston Market’s failure to pay wages resulting in regulatory action in New Jersey and litigation in Arizona and Massachusetts.

Now, at the beginning of 2024, the iconic department store Macy’s announced it is closing five stores nationwide and laying off 3.5% of its workforce, or 2,350 employees, to cut costs, the Wall Street Journal reported. “Despite our strong and tangible progress over the last few years, we remain under pressure,” its outgoing CEO Jeff Gennette said in a memo obtained by the Journal.

Since President Joe Biden took office in January 2021, inflation and prices for all goods and services soared, initially breaking 40-year record highs. As prices and costs go up, wages have gone down, “placing additional stress on family finances,” The Heritage Foundation’s “Biden Inflation Tracker” notes.

From January 2021 to November 2023, Heritage notes that real disposable income has dropped by 7.5%, home ownership affordability has dropped by over 37%, credit card debt has increased by over 36% and Americans' monthly savings have dropped by over 81%.

Over the same time period, consumer prices increased by more than 17%, gas prices increased by over 50%.

Despite recession predictions, the economy expanded slowly last year. But as a result of the Federal Reserve increasing interest rates, increased congressional spending, and other factors contributing to increased inflation, by late December 2023, the national debt surpassed $34 trillion for the first time in U.S. history. In fiscal year 2023, the administration and congress ran a deficit of at least $1.7 trillion.

Major store closures and ongoing inflationary concerns continue as only 39% of likely U.S. voters recently polled expressed a favorable view of Biden’s job performance as president.

Final CNN/UNH Poll Has Trump Leading Haley by 11 Points

And then there were two – former President Donald Trump and former U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley will duke it out in the first-in-the-nation primary on Tuesday.

Sunday's final polling before the primary by CNN/University of New Hampshire had Trump ahead 50%-39%.

The sampling of 2,348 with margin of error +/-2.8% was taken Tuesday through Friday of last week, ahead of Sunday afternoon's announcement by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis he was dropping out and endorsing Trump.

Trump was well ahead in registered Republicans; Haley commanded a lead among the independents.

There are 22 delegates to the Republican National Convention up for grabs, and awarded proportionally. New Hampshire, which picks presidential winners about 80% of the time since the turn of the 20th century, had 10 candidate names on the 2016 primary and Trump bested them with more than 35% of the vote after having run second to Sen. Ted Cruz in the Iowa caucuses.

In November, he was a loser to Democrat Hillary Clinton.

Haley has invested heavily in New Hampshire, crisscrossing the state with Gov. Chris Sununu, who endorsed the former ambassador back in mid-December. During Sununu’s endorsement speech, he predicted the battle would ultimately come down to Trump and Haley.

“This is a race between two people. Nikki Haley and Donald Trump. That’s it … with all due respect to the other candidates,” Sununu told the crowd at a time when the field was more than a half-dozen.

Sununu has urged voters to support Haley, hoping the combined support could be enough to dethrone Trump.

Haley's home state of South Carolina is next in the primary schedule, on the first Saturday in February. South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, who got engaged Saturday, gave an endorsement to Trump this weekend.

In The Center Square Voters' Voice Poll taken Jan. 2-4, Trump's 61% easily beat challengers Haley (12%), DeSantis (11%) and Vivek Ramaswamy (7%). Ramaswamy dropped out after Iowa.

Wisconsin Republicans Want Vote on 14-week Abortion Ban

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin Republicans are pushing a plan to let voters weigh in on the state’s abortion law.

A group of lawmakers introduced a plan they hope will put a 14-week abortion ban on the spring ballot.

“While I am personally pro-life, I know not everyone is,” Rep. Joel Kitchens, R-Sturgeon Bay, said, “It’s time we let the people of Wisconsin decide our laws regarding abortion and not leave it up to the whims of a judge.”

Wisconsin currently allows abortions until 20 weeks of pregnancy.

Kitchens said that a 14-week ban would still allow for most abortions.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 93% of abortions in the United States occur in the first trimester. However, many Democrats support abortion up to birth. Rep. Kitchens says that extreme position isn’t shared by most voters,” Kitchens said.

Sen. Mary Felzkowski, R-Tomahawk, said a vote on a 14-week ban would allow the people of Wisconsin to balance legal abortion with the restrictions that most polls say voters want.

“Out of an abundance of respect for how sensitive this issue is, we would like to hear directly from the voters whether they agree that this is what they want the law to be – striking a balance between protecting life and showing compassion and respect for women who find themselves in difficult situations,” Felzkowski added.

In order to get the 14-week ban on the ballot, Republican lawmakers would have to approve it in both the State Assembly and State Senate. Gov. Tony Evers would then have to sign it before voters would have their say.

Evers has already vowed not to sign the plan.

“If Republicans had their way, they'd ask Wisconsinites to strip themselves of some of the very reproductive freedoms that were only just recently restored,” Evers said on social media on Sunday. “I will not let Wisconsinites go back to the way the way things were a year ago, much less 50 years ago before #Roe. Period.”

DeSantis Drops Out, Endorses Trump Just Before New Hampshire GOP Primary

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced Sunday he is dropping out of the Republican presidential primary and endorsing former President Donald Trump.

DeSantis said he could not continue to ask for support when he does not have a "clear path to victory."

"I'm proud to have delivered on 100% of my promises, and I will not stop now," he said in an online video. "It's clear to me that a majority of Republican primary voters want to give Donald Trump another chance."

The news comes as New Hampshire voters are set to head to the polls Tuesday to choose their favored candidate in the Republican presidential primary race as Trump’s challengers run low on time to gain ground in the race.

Trump holds a sizeable lead in New Hampshire, though not as wide as his margin in Iowa, a state he won handily last Monday with more than 50% support.

DeSantis finished a distant second in Iowa, but he had a grim outlook in New Hampshire and little hope of winning any other early primary state. His campaign canceled some major media interviews this weekend, raising speculation that he could be considering leaving the race.

According to a RealClearPolitics aggregation of polling data, Trump at 50% support leads New Hampshire by 15 points, outpacing former Ambassador and South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who is in second with 35% support. DeSantis trails with about 6%.

Haley campaigned in New Hampshire Sunday, which included spending time with New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, who was considered a possible GOP presidential candidate, something that never materialized. Sununu endorsed Haley.

“We need someone at the top of their game in the Oval Office,” Haley wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, Sunday, repeating a familiar talking point for her campaign. “America deserves a better choice than two 80-year-old names from the past,” referring to Trump and President Joe Biden, the likely Democratic nominee.

The New Hampshire Union Leader, the largest paper in the state, echoed that sentiment in their endorsement of Haley on Saturday.

“Nikki Haley is an opportunity to vote for a candidate rather than against those two,” the paper said. “A candidate who can run circles around the dinosaurs from the last two administrations, backwards and in heels.”

Nationally, Trump dominates the GOP field as well and even has a lead over Biden.

The Center Square’s Voter’s Voice Poll released this month showed that Trump has more support than all his competitors combined.

The Center Square’s Voters' Voice poll queried Republican voters, “Which of the following candidates are you most likely to vote for in the 2024 Republican primary?” Of those surveyed, 61% of Republicans chose Trump. In the poll, 13% picked Haley while 12% chose DeSantis.

As The Center Square previously reported, the same poll shows Trump leads Biden by 4 percentage points in a potential general election faceoff. Trump also leads in most key swing states, according to recent surveys.

Trump also secured some major endorsements this month, including from two of his recent opponents. Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., as well as businessman Vivek Ramaswamy both endorsed Trump, and now DeSantis has.

Ramaswamy, who had vocally praised Trump even on the campaign trail, dropped out of the primary after securing about 7% of the vote in Iowa last week.

Keith Siegel, American Hostage Held by Hamas

Keith Siegel is an American hostage still held by Hamas, as of Jan. 19. Keith Siegel is an occupational therapist. There is a Facebook page...

List of American Hostages Still Held by Hamas: Why Don’t We All Know Their Names?

We're old enough to remember when American hostages held by terrorist groups overseas were big national stories, their names known by every American through...

Tammy Baldwin Votes to Send Money to Palestinian Authority

U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin just threw the remaining American and Israeli hostages held by Hamas under the bus, voting against an amendment that would...

What the Founding Fathers Would Say About the Legislative Map Debacle [WRN Voices]

“‘I’d rather get 80 percent of what I want than go over the cliff with my flags flying,’” Ronald Reagan’s Chief of Staff, James...

Maine Judge Issues Stay in Attempt to Disqualify Trump From Ballot

A Kennebec County Superior Court judge has issued a stay on the Maine secretary of state’s decision to disqualify former President Donald Trump from the primary ballot, citing the 14th Amendment.

In Justice Michaela Murphy’s decision, she refused to rule on the case until the U.S. Supreme Court weighed in on Colorado’s attempt to disqualify the former president. Murphy underscored the need to “promote consistency” in an effort to “avoid voter confusion.”

In addition to the stay, Murphy denied an appeal filed by Trump’s legal team earlier this month.

Last month, Secretary of State Shenna Bellows issued a decision brought forth by Maine voters to challenge Trump’s primary petition, determining it invalid. Bellows, a Democrat, “ruled that the declaration on his candidate consent form is false,” saying the former president is not qualified to hold the office of president, citing Section 3 of the 14th Amendment.

The Supreme Court agreed to hear Trump’s appeal challenging a decision from Colorado’s highest court ruling that the former president was ineligible to appear on the state’s primary ballot, citing the 14th Amendment.

The Maine GOP primary is set for Super Tuesday, which will be held March 5. The highest court in the land is scheduled to hear oral arguments on the Colorado appeal Feb. 8.

- Advertisment -

Most Read