17 Reasons Why Tom Tiffany Can Win the Wisconsin Governor’s Race

spot_img

Washington County Executive Josh Schoemann pulled a selfless page from Scott Walker ’06 and dropped out of the governor’s race to unite the party. He promptly endorsed U.S. Rep. Tom Tiffany. As with Walker, who dropped out of a primary the first time he ran for governor, earning enormous goodwill, when Schoemann is governor someday, we will consider this the moment that ensured it (the guy is only 43).

Republicans now have a certain nominee without the headache of a bloody primary: U.S. Rep. Tom Tiffany, a congressman, former campground manager, and once-legislator from northwestern Wisconsin. Meanwhile, the Democrats are fighting inside their crowded clown car.

Can he win it? Yes.

Here’s why U.S. Rep. Tom Tiffany can win the Wisconsin governor’s race in 2026:

1. He has a certain Wisconsin authenticity about him that people like in our governors. We elect governors with a bit of a “boy from Elroy” sensibility and humility. He has this quality. Heck, he even ran a campground. No mansions from out of state! Tony Evers is a partisan, but people perceive him as “folksy” and authentic, and so it softens his partisan edges. Tiffany’s authenticity will do that for him. He is a guy you’d want to have a beer with. The last “Tommy T” who ran for Wisconsin governor won.

2. He is a fighter who is willing to draw the contrast. He is smart and type A and will do well in debates. He is working hard.

3. The ICE stuff will settle down. It already is. And people will realize anew that they really don’t want open borders or illegal immigrants with criminal records to stay in this country. The Democrats will be stuck holding the bag full of extreme positions they are adopting now in the heat of the moment. A group of old men were chewing the fat at a local cafe recently. One said, “You know, I support getting people out of the country. I just don’t like how they are doing it.”

That is where most people are at. And if you listened to Tom Homan today, the Trump admin is already recalibrating how they are doing it. But most people are NOT with the abolish, hobble or unmask (endanger ICE) crowd. Just like most people don’t want to defund the police. Most people don’t want agitators shot in the streets, though. To state the obvious. People hate disorder. In times of disorder, though, they choose the candidate promising order (and that’s none of the Democrats.)

4. The Democrats have a fractured field of C-listers and will divide their money, energy, and grassroots. They will pull each other to the left.

5. Having socialist Francesca Hong in the race and getting some traction will pull the Democrats so far to the left that they will lose the middle and fall off a cliff.

6. There’s no incumbent (the last Republican to win statewide, John Leiber, had no incumbent.)

7. None of the Democrats is a moderate or heavyweight. They include a socialist and a guy who looked like a nut on video. As Ron Johnson learned in his last victory, it helps to have a horrible opponent.

8. The Democrats will pour so much money into legislative races that it will pull finances from the governor candidate (and even more so the AG).

9. The legacy media will try to destroy Tiffany, but they don’t have the power they once did, even four years ago. The AP was dropped by a lot of papers (poor Scott Bauer, but good for the GOP). There are fewer legacy reporters doing political coverage. We have the ability to get the truth to far more people. Social media censorship regimes are lifted. They will try to turn him into a caricature, but now they will get pushback.

10. Midterms have higher turnout than Supreme Court races.

11. Did I mention that the Democratic candidates are all goofs?

12. Obviously, no primary (thank you, Josh.) The base is united.

13. No Ben Wikler.

14. He looks like he just left a farm breakfast.

15. He is vetted and squeaky clean.

16. He kept chocolate milk in schools. Just saying.

17. Soaring property taxes (that 400-year increase is memorable).

Challenges

1. The media and left will try to federalize the race.

2. It will depend somewhat on what’s going on with Trump and his economy in September. Which is not predictable.

3. Angry liberal women turn out to vote. Will Trump voters?

4. People want free stuff.

5. He has a lengthy congressional and legislative record to paw through, which is why it can be hard for congressmen to win governorships.

6. Midterms can go to the opposite party of the president in power (just ask Scott Walker… 2018.)

spot_img
michael alfonso

Under Fire, Michael Alfonso Suddenly Reveals He Has a Job – But a Church Says It’s Part-Time

The day after Wisconsin Right Now posted, “Who knew asking a candidate in a major race, ‘What is your job?’ would be so controversial,”...

Lobbyist for DraftKings, FanDuel Warns They May Pursue Prediction Markets If State Senate Doesn’t Do What They Want

A lobbyist for the group representing controversial out-of-state online betting giants DraftKings and FanDuel is turning up the pressure on "key Senate Republican staff"...
Rebecca Cooke

Rebecca Cooke Scrubbed Website Detailing Her Leftist Fundraiser Past

The Wayback Machine captured the political website that leftist Wisconsin Congressional candidate Rebecca Cooke tried to delete. It's the website for her political campaign company,...
reid hoffman

Rebecca Cooke Took Money From PAC Funded by Epstein Island Visitor Reid Hoffman

3rd District Congressional District candidate Rebecca Cooke accepted money from a PAC that was funded by Epstein Island visitor Reid Hoffman. In the wake of...

The State Senate Has a Great Opportunity to Protect Free Speech This Week

I'm hoping that the Wisconsin State Senate will call the pending free-speech bill to the floor this week and pass it. I'm confident they...
waukesha county sheriff

ALL Waukesha County Sheriff Candidates Support 287G Immigration Authority

Illegal immigration is an issue of great importance to many Waukesha County voters. Retiring Sheriff Eric Severson was a regional leader when he successfully...
sean duffy

On No Endorsement, Sean Duffy, the ‘Prince of Duffylandia’ & Those Other Guys

This is like an HBO series!!! So, I’ve been pondering the battle of heavyweights in this 7th Congressional District GOP primary race ever since I...

The Disturbing Case of Kayla Calderon, MPD & the Milwaukee County DA

On March 18, 2023, Milwaukee police officers responded to a 911 call and discovered Kayla F. Calderon, an 18-year-old high school student two months...

Michael Alfonso Splits With Other 7th CD Candidates on Davis-Bacon Act, Prevailing Wage

It's safe to say that the five candidates seeking the Republican nomination for Tom Tiffany's congressional seat probably don't disagree on the issues much...
michael alfonso

Sawyer County GOP Chair Calls Michael Alfonso’s Transportation Lobby Money ‘Sickening’

"They are trying to make it a coronation versus competing. If Michael (Alfonso) could win on his own, that would be different. It seems...

Protect Free Speech From Frivolous Lawsuits in Wisconsin

By David Keating Imagine spending years in court because a powerful individual didn’t like what you wrote about them and filed a meritless lawsuit against...

Explosive Lawsuit Accuses Oconto Falls School District of ‘Condoning’ Grooming & Sexual Abuse by 9 Teachers

The Oconto Falls School District was accused in a federal lawsuit of "fostering and condoning sexual abuse and grooming by discovering that at least...

Oconomowoc Mayor Candidate Karen Spiegelberg SCOLDS Local Business For Posting Matt Rosek Sign

Karen was a Karen? Oconomowoc Mayoral candidate Karen Spiegelberg lived up to her "Karen" name the other day when she lectured a local business...
Michael Alfonso

On Michael Alfonso, Evita Duffy-Alfonso, Meg Ellefson & the 7th Congressional District

🚨 On Michael Alfonso, Evita Duffy-Alfonso, and Meg Ellefson… and Saturday’s big 7th Congressional District caucus…. In case you missed it, Sean Duffy’s daughter, Evita...

Tammy Baldwin Broke the ‘Bipartisan’ Nominating Commission Over Brad Schimel. Get Rid of It

No one in Wisconsin is more qualified to be U.S. Attorney than Brad Schimel, and that fact exposes Tammy Baldwin's blatant partisanship. He is...
bob donovan

Bob Donovan, Sylvia Ortiz-Velez Fight to End Emission Testing for 7 Wisconsin Counties

"The vehicle inspection and maintenance program is no longer useful due to the economic burdens on citizens and technological advancements reducing the need for...
jose perez

Jose Perez Allegedly Drove Unregistered Vehicle to Milwaukee City Hall After Jacking Up Wheel Tax

Milwaukee Common Council President Jose Perez isn't having a great few weeks. The veteran alderman, who recently made an uncharged butt-pinching accusation against a prominent...
rebecca cookle

VIDEO: Rebecca Cooke Rushes Off When Asked, ‘Why Did You Call ICE Disgusting?’

Leftist fundraiser turned congressional candidate Rebecca Cooke was confronted on camera and asked why she called the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement “disgusting.” Cooke's opponent...
evers

Wisconsin Voters More Concerned About Property Taxes Than School Funding

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin taxpayers are growing in their concern over property taxes, as witnessed by a recent Marquette poll showing that 60% of voters are more concerned about reducing property taxes than increasing spending on public schools.

That opinion has shifted over time as 61% of voters were more concerned about funding for schools in Aug. 2018 and polling shifted from favoring funding for schools to being more concerned about property taxes in between late 2022 and mid-2023, according to the poll.

The most recent poll asked questions of 818 Wisconsin registered voters between Feb. 11-19.

The shift comes as state lawmakers continue to debate what the best policy is to spend an expected $2.5 billion surplus at the end of the fiscal year.

Legislative Republicans sent a plan to Gov. Tony Evers that includes $1.5 billion in income tax rebates, $500 million in money for the state's school tax levy credit and $200 million included for special education funding.

Evers said during his State of the State speech that the plan for property tax relief and education spending must balance the two "a heck of a lot better.”

Assembly Speaker Robin Vos acknowledged during a press conference that Evers won’t negotiate on the school funding he approved with a partial veto that Republicans refer to as Evers’ 400-year property tax increase.

Evers used a partial veto and erased numbers and a hyphen to change “2024-25” to “2425” in the budget bill, locking in a $325 per student per year funding increase for 400 years.

That veto was the subject of a Wisconsin Supreme Court ruling approving the move and then legislation and a constitutional amendment proposal to change the governor’s partial veto power since.

Lawmakers Request DOJ Probe Into Whether Somali Fraud and ICE Protests Are Linked

The U.S. House Oversight Committee is requesting that the Department of Justice investigate whether the Somali welfare fraud and anti-immigration enforcement protests in Minnesota are connected.

In a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi, Republican lawmakers suggested the possibility that there exists “organized efforts to obstruct law enforcement with foreign influences and criminal activities, including fraud.”

“The Committee believes it is imperative to assess whether foreign-sourced funding and/or proceeds of financial crimes, particularly those involving federal funds, may be contributing to, or otherwise exacerbating unrest and efforts to obstruct law enforcement,” the lawmakers, led by Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., wrote Monday.

Their request for a DOJ briefing on the matter follows President Donald Trump’s previous comments that the Minnesota Somali fraud scandal "is at least partially responsible for the violent organized protests going on in the streets.”

The estimated $9 billion in welfare fraud was uncovered in October, and by December nearly 100 people – including 85 Somali immigrants – faced criminal charges, with dozens pleading guilty.

Among other schemes, fraudsters had falsely claimed children had autism to obtain benefits and enrolled ineligible individuals in food assistance programs.

On Jan. 7, protests in the Twin Cities region erupted after a federal immigration enforcement officer fatally shot a Minnesota resident and American citizen who authorities say attempted to hit agents with her car.

The committee believes the incidents “suggest coordinated or systemic activity” and is urging the DOJ to investigate “whether large-scale financial crimes involving federal funds may contribute to broader public safety or civil order challenges” related to immigration.

“The scale and duration of these schemes have raised concerns regarding whether fraud proceeds are being laundered or otherwise routed through nonprofit or organizational entities in ways that evade oversight,” lawmakers wrote. “As much of this fraud has disproportionally involved Minnesota’s immigrant community, targeted enforcement operations by ICE play a key role in stopping this systemic corruption.”

Fraudsters have taken advantage of Medicaid-funded services through Minnesota Department of Human Services programs for years, particularly targeting COVID-19 era programs, The Center Square reported.

In light of the newest revelations, Republicans have accused state officials of suppressing fraud reports and punishing whistleblowers, which Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison has denied.

Gov. Tim Walz recently unveiled his “comprehensive anti-fraud package,” but only after the Trump administration halted nearly $260 million in Medicaid funds to the state.