Wisconsin's election results are in, with the swing state voting for Donald Trump in the 2024 presidential election, according to projections from the Associated Press decision team. The state's 10 Electoral College votes will go toward the Republican ...
Senate Democrat Tammy Baldwin won re-election Tuesday because she outperformed her party’s standard-bearer, Kamala Harris, across most of Wisconsin, but especially in smaller counties where former President Donald Trump made his biggest gains and in election wards with lower incomes and lower rates of college education.
Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin pledged during her reelection victory speech Thursday to work with President-elect Donald Trump when possible, but she also vowed to fight him to protect the national health care law and abortion rights.
More than 3.3 million Wisconsin voters cast ballots in the presidential election. Donald Trump won the race. Tammy Baldwin won the U.S. Senate race.
Democrats were hoping to flip at least one U.S. House seat in Wisconsin to retain control of the lower chamber.
Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin declared victory early Wednesday morning, saying she had bucked the red tide by eking out a narrow win over GOP challenger Eric Hovde to secure a third term in the U.S. Senate. Also...
Unofficial results show about 73% of Wisconsin’s voting-age population cast ballots in the 2024 presidential race, with the raw number of voters topping out at the highest in state history.
Devin LeMahieu will return as the Republican majority leader of the Wisconsin Senate. The GOP caucus elected LeMahieu to the position during a meeting Thursday.
(The Center Square) – One of Wisconsin’s Republican state representatives says that so many schools went to taxpayers for more money Tuesday shows the state’s system to pay for schools is working. Rep. Scott Allen, R-Waukehsa, said there’s nothing ...
Wisconsin voters are making choices for President, U.S. Senate, U.S. Congress and myriad Wisconsin state house seats. Find results here.
As of about 4 p.m. Tuesday, at least 3,415,306 Wisconsinites had voted in the presidential election, per the Associated Press. That's with 99% of the vote reported and not including write-in votes for president, meaning the final voter total will be higher.