WisDems accused Elon Musk of “buying” Brad Schimel a seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court, launching a campaign against him as Musk PAC pours money into the Wisconsin Supreme Court race.
Candidate for Wisconsin Supreme Court and Dane County Circuit Court Judge Susan Crawford held a meet-and-greet on Saturday at EVP Coffee in Madison. About 40 supporters gathered in the small coffee shop to discuss the upcoming Supreme Court race and spread canvassing materials — and to celebrate Crawford’s birthday.
Brad Schimel, who has received the support of Musk, said Wednesday that it's more concerning that his Democratic-supported opponent is benefiting from donations by liberal philanthropist George Soros.
I reported that President Elmo and his PAC were dropping two thirds of a million dollars on the Wisconsin Supreme Court race for fellow fascist Brad Schimel. Since then, Elmo had doubled the amount and proved that he is as good at buying elections as he is doing government audits: A political action group tied to Elon Musk that has sought to influence Wisconsin’s high stakes Supreme Court election canceled a social media ad this week after it featured the wrong person.
The overflow crowd of frustrated Democrats who met this week in a small Wisconsin city’s library voiced anger over President Donald Trump, his billionaire adviser Elon Musk and the direction of
The state Democratic Party is launching a seven-figure initiative, with digital ads and town halls, to counter Elon Musk's Supreme Court spending.
Wisconsin Supreme Court candidate Brad Schimel said he'd be a "support network" for Trump if elected to the bench.
Supreme Court candidate Susan Crawford says Elon Musk is "buying off" her opponent but dismisses talks about her $1M donation from George Soros.
The ad includes a picture of Susan P. Crawford, a Harvard University law professor, and not Susan M. Crawford, who is running for a seat on the state's highest court.
A group backed by billionaire Elon Musk is behind a new set of deceptive attack ads and text messages targeting voters just weeks ahead of the election for a seat on Wisconsin’s Supreme Court.