Gerrymandering, mail-in ballots and the 2026 spring election
04/02/26 | 18m 16s | Rating: NR
Judges reject a congressional redistricting case, the Trump administration seeks to block mail-in ballots and Wisconsin's 2026 Supreme Court election arrives — Inside Wisconsin Politics examines each.
Copy and Paste the Following Code to Embed this Video:
Gerrymandering, mail-in ballots and the 2026 spring election
>> A gerrymandering arms race is happening around the country this year.
Why not in Wisconsin?
Also, how some big orders out of Washington could affect Wisconsin.
And a look at the closing days of our state Supreme Court race.
This is inside Wisconsin politics.
I'm Shawn Johnson here with my colleagues, Anya van Wagtendonk Zac Schultz and Rich Cramer in Eau Claire.
Hey, everyone.
>> Hey.
Hello.
Hey.
>> So Rich, there had been sort of this hope by Democrats that there was this one case in this courtroom in Madison that could potentially redraw the congressional lines ahead of the midterm elections.
It seems like this courtroom said, no, that door is actually closed.
What did they say this week?
>> So they said that they don't really have the authority to do anything about the maps.
The lawsuit is seeking a redraw because of some things that happened back in 2022.
Well, the Supreme Court is the one that put those maps in effect, but the circuit court judges said that they just they can't overrule the Supreme Court.
So essentially, they dismissed the case.
And it seems all but likely that the current districts, which are held by six Republicans and two Democrats, will remain the same for the November election.
>> And just kind of zooming out as to why this feels like it matters more at this moment in time, you have this redistricting battle going across the country where Republican states have redrawn their congressional maps to add more Republican seats.
Democratic states have responded in kind.
Where does this leave Wisconsin?
Big picture.
Zack, when it comes to what everything looks like here as part of that battle.
to be operating under the same congressional lines Evers version of the maps, if you recall, under the old least change model, that the Supreme Court at that time run by conservatives, dictated this was Tony Evers version of the old Republican map, slightly adjusting them.
The most competitive district remains the third, which is Western Wisconsin La Crosse and going up through Rich's area.
And that race has been close for a few cycles.
It will remain close this fall.
Democrats across the possible pickup, but the rest of the districts, barring a huge wave, look like they're going to stay the way they've been.
There were Democrats who were thinking Wisconsin could get in this redistricting game.
Most of the states doing that around the country are doing that with one party rule, where the Democrats or Republicans control the entire state so they can do this mid-decade, even though they're not supposed to be.
Wisconsin obviously doesn't have that.
It would have had to go through the Supreme Court.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court has consistently said, we do not want to touch these congressional lines.
They have been given options multiple times, and they've said no through original action.
So that's why in this case, there were two different plaintiffs that said, how about we go through the local courts first and see if it can work the way up to the Supreme Court under a law passed by Scott Walker and the Republicans, that meant these changes had to go to this panel of three judges, and there were two panels created by the Supreme Court.
One of them has said, well, we'll have a trial in April of 27.
So a year away, obviously nowhere near in time for 26.
The other one was the one that dismissed the case this week.
The other panel that still has a case out there has not ruled on their motion to dismiss.
It's possible that could get thrown out under the very same grounds.
And it looks like at this time the floor is in the law that was passed that was supposed to hear this because it requires Supreme Court to set up these judges to do something.
And the judges say it's not clear what we have the authority to do in this case, which is why they dismissed it yet another time where these this challenge will not get to the Supreme Court under this venue.
>> To the dismay of many Democrats who said, hey, we have A43 majority on the Liberals do on the state Supreme Court.
Let's try there.
Maybe not the legislature this time because it's not going to go anywhere there or will it on you because, you know, some people may have heard about this push by Governor Tony Evers to ban partizan gerrymandering in Wisconsin.
He's going to call a special session for that later this month.
Just a thought exercise here.
Could it work?
Could that change the lines?
>> I mean, if history is any guide, Evers special sessions don't often go anywhere, right?
Republicans who control the legislature, they have to show up, but they gavel in and gavel out very often on his agenda.
But there was actually maybe some signs that there could be something to this.
So initially, first of all, Republicans did not sort of dismiss it out of hand, which was notable.
Robin Vos said that he would be willing to negotiate on this last.
I asked him about it a couple weeks ago.
He said, like, it hasn't come up yet.
So it's possible that a deal kind of won't be brokered.
But when I've spoken to experts about it, what they say is that because of the redrawn state maps of two years ago, kind of GOP guaranteed hold of the legislature is no longer so guaranteed.
And so both parties would need to kind of map out the 2026 elections, the 2028 elections, the 2030 elections going back and forth.
And so because of that, it's not clear that gerrymandering in Wisconsin is beneficial to either party in a way that in California or Florida, it is guaranteed sort of beneficial to one party or another because we have divided government and these super, super close elections, because we are so purple.
Gerrymandering is not necessarily beneficial to either side.
So maybe getting rid of it altogether is actually the politically better choice.
>> But as a constitutional amendment in the year 2026, not going to happen because it just it takes too long.
>> Well, certainly.
Right.
So it won't affect the midterms in any kind of way.
But if there were any kind of like negotiation there and constitutional bit longer, and Republicans have said they don't agree with sort of the language that Evers has put forward, that it's too vague and it's too broad.
So there's all these details that would need to get hashed out.
But I think this kind of broader conversation, knowing that voters pretty categorically, regardless gerrymandering.
They don't subject to gerrymandering.
It could be a really interesting issue to kind of be in the water during this election year.
>> But just to be clear, the most important thing for viewers to know is that even if a deal somehow got passed like the Hail Mary of all Hail Mary's for gerrymandering reform, it maps.
The next time this would come up would be redistricting in 2032 after the 30 census.
So these maps would be locked in place.
The only way they're going to change, barring the Wisconsin Supreme Court, is if Democrats win a trifecta this fall, then they would actually have one party rule to do what we've seen in these other states.
But otherwise, it's not going to happen.
>> So what about that other case, though?
You alluded to it, Rich.
You're familiar with this case.
It's been filed by law forward.
And it just took a different approach to this redistricting question.
>> Yeah, I'd say it's slightly different approach.
It's kind of getting at the same thing.
The the overall complaint is that the districts are designed to favor incumbents.
So that's slightly different than the argument that, well, Republicans drew the districts to favor Republicans, but it's in a lot of ways very similar.
So that case is proceeding.
The parties in the lawsuit seem to be more amicable with one another.
They've all agreed on these court dates that will start in 2027.
So again, that's not going to result in any changes to the congressional map in Wisconsin before November.
And if it's not thrown out on the same grounds that the other case was dismissed, it'll be interesting to see how that plays out before the three judge panel.
>> Yeah, I would say there's a pretty good chance that we are going to.
While it is not really a scheduled thing to do in 2027, I think we're going to be talking about this map in 2027.
I mean, we just think about what wins elections in Wisconsin or anywhere from a party's perspective.
Well, you got You still have to have that.
You got to have a message.
Voters like you got to have money.
But what is maybe more powerful than all of those lines and districts that favor you, you change the math because you can't win in a district where you have those other three.
If the voters are tilted to the other side.
So I think in this hyper partizan era, they're definitely going to be talking about this in 2027, whether it is in the legislature with Democrats in power or the Supreme Court, where A43 majority for Liberals now could potentially be five two next year, we just don't know.
So I think that's something that like, obviously is going to be on our radar for a while.
>> Redistricting is always in play in Wisconsin, and it'll never be a topic that we're not interested in.
It's not not not relevant.
>> That's right.
We don't have to wait for the next census.
I'm feeling so from voting maps to voting rich, there was also this big executive order from President Trump this week dealing with mail in voting.
What did the president call for there?
>> He called for some very sweeping changes, essentially a federal overhaul and a lot more participation from the regard to voting lists and and absentee voting.
So the executive order directs federal agencies to create lists of U.S.
citizens who are eligible, eligible to vote in every state, including Wisconsin.
And then it also directs the U.S.
Postal Service to not send any mail in ballots to people who aren't on those lists, and it would just give the President Donald Trump's administration a lot of power over who gets to vote and who doesn't.
So it's likely to wind up in court.
In fact, a lawsuit has already been filed.
There's a lot of questions about whether the president can can do this.
And that's what we're going to see the different parties in the lawsuit argue.
So it's it's a big change that's been proposed, but it's just an executive order.
So it doesn't carry the same kind of weight as a congressional act or something like that.
>> So I think what a lot of people would be rightfully wondering is, is this going to happen?
Is this something that is likely to happen in Wisconsin specifically?
>> The first thing I always look at when these kind of things come out of Trump White House specifically is what is the reaction for politicians in Wisconsin?
We saw universally all the Democrats, including Governor Evers, use a profanity online to describe his reaction to this.
And we didn't see anything from Republicans.
And if this had a prayer or a chance of actually being legal or valid in Wisconsin, there would have been some of the usual Trump supporting Republicans that would have come out and said, yes, thank you, President Trump.
It's about time.
I didn't see any of that.
Maybe somewhere it was put out and I missed it.
But the overall reaction was a lot of crickets from Republicans.
That signals most election observers not legal in Wisconsin.
Unenforceable in Wisconsin would remove the right to vote for absentee ballots.
We have.
You can register on day of.
There's just so many things that do not apply to how Wisconsin elections are run, barring the fact that it's not even legal constitutionally across the rest of the country.
According to every election expert that we ever talked to.
I mean, Shawn, you've covered this just as long.
It's not possible for the federal government to dictate how elections are run.
That's done by the states.
>> No, I mean, actually, Rich was just doing an interview with a legal expert and Rich, I'm stealing your story here.
But the expert was just reading from their phone the section of the Constitution that says, basically, this is a right that belongs to states.
Anya, there was an order this week, though not from the president, from the United States Supreme Court, that overturned a conversion therapy ban in Colorado.
We have a conversion therapy ban in Wisconsin.
What does that U.S.
Supreme Court decision mean for us here?
>> Yeah, so this is kind of there's sort of two levels at which this decision kind of functions in Wisconsin.
So to go back in time a little bit last summer, there was this big Wisconsin state Supreme Court decision.
That is the reason that we have this statewide conversion therapy ban, but it is an administrative rule.
It's not a law.
And so kind of putting aside the conversation around what that did for the balance of powers, it was this kind of huge decision.
One of the outcomes of that was that agencies that want to impose rules can do so.
And one of the ones that was imposed was around professional behavior for therapists and marriage counselors.
And so according to the rules of their conduct, they cannot practice conversion therapy, which is sort of the practice of, of counseling people towards certain gender sexual identities.
So that is the form that our ban takes.
So that's different than how it looks in Colorado.
All of which is to say that the answer of how this affects us in Wisconsin is it really depends on who you ask.
So according to the governor's office and the governor supports this ban on conversion therapy, the ban here is still in place according sort of pending litigation was kind of the the, you know, tempering of that.
And then I spoke to conservative kind of supporters of overturning bans on this, including at the Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty.
And they said, well, as soon as the lawsuit is filed, you know, that will go after the Wisconsin ban.
And so the question is, is Will going to file that lawsuit?
So right now it seems to be on the books.
And also we have many local versions of these laws around Wisconsin.
But sort of how soon will this be then challenged here in the state?
That sort of the big question.
>> But definitely it carries more weight than your average executive order, I suppose, because they are the court of last resort.
>> And yeah, and they said that these types of bans violate a counselor's free speech.
That's a First Amendment violation.
That's a very big and it was an 8 to 1 decision, right?
Even liberals on the Supreme Court found.
>> That what's interesting is more likely that would be filed in federal court, which really would take away the venue of the Liberal majority in Wisconsin Supreme Court, even though it's a state administrative rule.
This was a federal court decision, free speech.
First amendment is a federal right, so they don't have to worry about Wisconsin's Liberals running the court.
They can skip the venue and head right to Madison and federal court.
>> Sure.
So we got to talk about our court, though, because we have an election on Tuesday.
By the time we do the show next week, we're going to know who the next justice is.
There were some fundraising numbers out this week.
Rich, as we wind up this campaign, what story did they tell?
>> Well, they told that Liberal appeals court justice excuse me, Liberal Appeals Court Judge Chris Taylor is continuing to really pull ahead in terms of fundraising over conservative appeals.
Justice Judge Maria Lazar.
So Taylor, in this last reporting period, raised four times as much as Lazar.
She also got donations from around 20,000 more than 20,000 people.
Lazar donations came from about six 700 people.
So a big discrepancy there.
Also, Taylor really outspent Lazar this time.
So the numbers actually represent an improvement for Lazar compared to the last reporting period that ended at the end of last year, which was a 10 to 1 gap with Taylor in the lead, but still not the kind of numbers you want to have with a, you know, days before the election.
>> And some money coming to the candidates from the political parties.
Zac, you've done some reporting on this.
One of these people is going to be a justice very soon, and they will have that political donation basically on their resume.
Are they going to have to step down when these parties have business before the court?
>> The short answer is no.
And there are two different courts that have said that is the reason, the first of which is the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
And when the conservatives ruled the court about a little more than a decade ago, they put in place the recusal standard that still governs the court.
That says just because you received a campaign donation does not mean that you are biased in part for that party.
Part of that reason, the rationale was, well, what if your opponent donates money to you and then tries to kick you off the case?
Another one is the United States Supreme Court has similar rulings that have been applied multiple times that say that just because you received a campaign donation does not mean you have to step down.
This has been tried repeatedly.
They've Republicans have gone after Janet Protasiewicz multiple times, including on redistricting cases over and over because of the donations she got.
And over and over, no one has been stepping down over this in Wisconsin.
>> You know, I'm curious, Anya, the both parties, we said gave money to the candidates.
Democrats gave more.
But in the past, they've given a lot more.
What can we read into the fact that they're deciding to not deem this the election of all elections and pouring all resources into it the way that they did in the Protasiewicz race or the Crawford race?
>> Yeah.
I mean, we are used to kind of hearing that level of language around both the Supreme Court elections and then also various national elections.
most important of our lives.
>> Exactly.
But this one, November is actually probably the most important of our lives.
And maybe the Democrats want to kind of keep that messaging for the midterms.
And so kind of stepping back and maybe they're really confident about their contender this time.
The stakes are not as high.
Liberals will hold a majority no matter who wins.
And so why not kind of keep those resources in the bank for November?
>> Zac, you described it as kind of they're making a bet.
Essentially.
>> They're hedging their bet that they don't have to invest any more to secure this win.
I think you pointed out perfectly that even if they lose the hedge on that bet, somehow they still maintain the majority.
But the incentives aren't as high.
And seeing the incumbent Republicans or conservatives leave this race repeatedly shows they don't believe the same either.
>> Sure.
Well, that's all the time we have for today.
Thanks for joining us for this week's Inside Wisconsin Politics.
Be sure to follow us on PBS Wisconsin.
Org npr.org, YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts.
Search Episodes
Donate to sign up. Activate and sign in to Passport. It's that easy to help PBS Wisconsin serve your community through media that educates, inspires, and entertains.
Make your membership gift today
Only for new users: Activate Passport using your code or email address
Already a member?
Look up my account
Need some help? Go to FAQ or visit PBS Passport Help
Need help accessing PBS Wisconsin anywhere?
Online Access | Platform & Device Access | Cable or Satellite Access | Over-The-Air Access
Visit Access Guide
Need help accessing PBS Wisconsin anywhere?
Visit Our
Live TV Access Guide
Online AccessPlatform & Device Access
Cable or Satellite Access
Over-The-Air Access
Visit Access Guide
Passport

Follow Us