Dane County continues to be a powerhouse for Dems that GOPs cannot match. Not only did it account for around 13% of total turnout (an even higher amount than in the last 2 Supreme Court races), but it was an abolute rout, with Protasiewicz winning by more than 150,000 votes!Both Janet Protasiewicz and Tammy Baldwin won Wisconsin by about 11%, but how they got there differed.
— Ethan 🌹🎶🇺🇦 (@EthanPKaiser) April 5, 2023
Where Baldwin did better in the rural areas, Protasiewicz made up for in Milwaukee, Dane county, the WOW counties, and Eau Claire (where we saw long lines at the university) pic.twitter.com/6vd51psBmH
Kelly also got destroyed in Milwaukee County, where there used to be areas that voted Republican. Those areas seem to be shrinking with every election, and Janet ran the table in every Milwaukee County suburb, to go on top of the Dane County-level percentage that she drew in the state's largest city.In Yesterday's Supreme Court election Liberal Janet Protasiewicz Won by a huge margin in Dane County outrunning Biden's performance by over 10 points and only losing 1 municipality. pic.twitter.com/BNmCGaMSmD
— 🇺🇦North Carolina Mapper🇺🇦 (@UniteCarolina) April 5, 2023
You look at those results, and I'd say GOP Dan Knodl was very lucky to squeak out his State Senate race in the 8th District by less than 2% vs Jodi Habush Sinykin. Protasiewicz appears to have won that district, and Southern Ozaukee County went blue on Tuesday. The only thing that saved Knodl was the GOP gerrymander that sent the district back into Washington County and more rural parts of Waukesha and Ozaukee.Protasiewicz carried all 19 municipalities in Milwaukee County.
— J. Miles Coleman (@JMilesColeman) April 5, 2023
recent Dems who won statewide by about the same margin (Dallet/Baldwin 2018, Karofsky 2020) missed a few. https://t.co/jXiRRke6Oo
Would Knodl really be dumb enough to try to use the illegitimate GOP 22-11 supermajority in the Senate to get Justice-elect Protasiewicz removed after his constituents voted for her? Especially with a full term in Senate District 8 on the ballot during the 2024 Presidential election? Heck, the Germantown native should want to have these maps redrawn under the new liberal majority on the Court, because the way the 8th District is currently set up and the way those burbs are moving left, it's going to fall to the Dems sooner than later. I'll discuss the prospect of GOP Senators trying to abuse that supermajority in the near future, but in brief - they'd be complete morons to try, it likely wouldn't succeed, several current Senators would stand to lose their seats, it would guarantee more double-digit Dem wins to go on top of fair maps. Bring it on, MAGAts. Lastly, even if the new Supreme Court is not able to get cases completed and maps changed by November 2024 (that said, there's a case that's ready to go on Day 1 in August, and there are plenty of maps to choose from after all the maps that were drawn and discussed in 2021), I wouldn't want to be GOP Congressman Derrick Van Orden today. He's rightfully a major target to be a one-and-done, as Protasiwiecz just won that district by double digits.Here is a precinct map for that. 5 Knodl-Protasiewicz precincts mostly in Waukesha. https://t.co/NjxWwiygJF pic.twitter.com/gt43CWG7NE
— 🇺🇦North Carolina Mapper🇺🇦 (@UniteCarolina) April 5, 2023
I don't know why there's a 4 month break between this election and the new liberal majority taking over, but let's bask in the big win from Protasiewicz for now. And know athat we have taken a big step toward reversing the wreckage of the last 12 years, and in restoring reproductive rights and overall fairness in our state. This post from Milwaukee journalist Dan Shafer summed it up perfectly on the eve of the election.Huge win for House Democratic Leader @hakeemjeffries & retaking the majority in 2024: Judge Janet Protasiewicz won WI’s 3rd Congressional District in a landslide 55-45% over the candidate endorsed by Jan 6 terrorist insurrectionist @derrickvanorden. Vote total: 119,421 to 97,364. https://t.co/Kwr4WuW44g
— scot ross (@rossacrosswi) April 6, 2023
RESET is the right word. Having the majority on the Supreme Court is no guarantee of Dem success at the ballot box going forward, or of major progressive policy reform happening in the next year. But it does allow us to start over, and have a state politics that gives a CHANCE for both parties to succeed, to force legislators to have to listen out of fear of losing their jobs, and for voters to be able to get the changes they want. That's all we have asked for over these last 12 long years.And here is my SPECIAL REPORT on how gerrymandering has warped politics in Wisconsin and how electing Janet Protasiewicz could bring about the political reset that our state desperately needs. https://t.co/KNttSNofPk
— Dan Shafer (@DanRShafer) April 3, 2023
I can think of only one election in my entire life that has given me this much joy and relief—Evers beating Walker. Biden beating Trump comes next. My honest question though, is this: Even if the Supreme Court succeeds in declaring Wisconsin’s 1849 abortion law unconstitutional, what does it get replaced with? Isn’t it up to the legislature to pass a new law? The gerrymandered, supermajority GOP legislature?
ReplyDeleteThat’s why, even though the “biggest issue” in this election was abortion, the most important thing that needs fixing is the gerrymandering. Because once we have fair election maps in this state, everything else falls into place.
Minnesconsin Tom
As I understand it, the abortion lawsuit includes the point that the state passed laws since then (in the ‘80s and ‘90s) that would be applied. I think that’s still limited beyond Roe v Wade, but certainly is not the ban that existed in 1849.
DeleteBut yes, fixing the gerrymandering is the key to a lot of other needed resets. Because the GOP Legislature has thought of itself as immune to public opinion (beyond big donors and MAGA trash who vote in GOP primaries), and that ends when we get fair maps.
Jake