Susan Crawford and Brad Schimel bring their political histories — and partisan backers —to the race for the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
Elon Musk weighed in on the Wisconsin Supreme Court race in an X post on Wednesday. “Very important to vote Republican for the Wisconsin Supreme Court to prevent voting fraud!” the billionaire wrote in a social media post,
A Wisconsin meteorologist has reportedly lost her job at a Milwaukee TV station, one day after she took to social media to criticize Elon Musk's alleged Nazi salute during the inauguration of President Donald Trump on Monday.
The Tesla CEO and X owner posted about Wisconsin's Supreme Court race a day after a Milwaukee meteorologist was fired for criticizing his arm gesture.
Musk has promoted antisemitic and white nationalist content online, and has endorsed a neo-Nazi party in Germany.
The Starlink satellite lit up skies over Wisconsin, Michigan and Illinois as people witnessed several fireballs roaring down towards Earth.
Sam Kuffel, the weather reporter for CBS 58, was let go by the station a day after she posted two items on her Instagram page condemning Musk.
We want to hear from you. The firing of a CBS 58 meteorologist over comments on her social media account raises questions about free speech.
The Republican-backed candidate in Wisconsin's pivotal state Supreme Court race says that he doesn't object to President Donald Trump using his power to pardon.
Meteorologist Sam Kuffel criticized Elon Musk on social media for his straight-arm gesture some likened to a Nazi salute at the Trump inauguration.
(WLUK) -- Elon Musk chimed in Thursday on the high-profile race that will decide control of Wisconsin's highest court. The tech giant and world's richest person first shared a post on X, written by a conservative activist, about the upcoming Wisconsin Supreme Court election. Musk then added this statement:
HARRISBURG, Pa. — Republicans put Pennsylvania and Wisconsin back in the win column in the 2024 presidential race, and they're hoping that momentum carries over to contests this year that will determine whether their state Supreme Courts retain left-leaning majorities or flip to conservative control.