The Wisconsin election on Tuesday produced its expected winner but a striking margin: Democratic-backed appeals court judge Chris Taylor defeated conservative-backed judge Maria Lazar by roughly 20 percentage points, expanding liberals’ court majority from 4-3 to 5-2 and cementing liberal control through at least 2030.
Summary
As NBC News reported, Taylor ran up large margins in Milwaukee and Dane counties, carried Ozaukee County — a traditionally conservative Milwaukee suburb — and won more than 20 counties that voted for Trump in 2024. The race was technically nonpartisan, but both candidates ran with clear partisan backing. In her victory speech, Taylor addressed the political dimension without naming Trump directly: “Politics has no place in the judiciary, and the judiciary is not a rubber stamp for any party, group or branch of government — including the federal government.”
The most significant number from Tuesday is the gap between what was predicted and what happened. The 14th Congressional District in Georgia — another Tuesday election — showed a 17-point Democratic swing in one of America’s most Republican districts. Wisconsin’s Supreme Court race showed a 20-point Democratic margin in a contest where the majority was never in question and spending was a fraction of prior years. Both results, on the same night, in different states and different contexts, pointed in the same direction: Democratic enthusiasm running well ahead of what 2024 results would imply.
Taylor’s geographic reach was notable. She carried rural counties that voted for Trump in 2024 and held Ozaukee County in Milwaukee’s suburban ring — a county that has historically been part of the conservative base in statewide races. That cross-geographic performance without the high-stakes energy of the 2025 race suggests the enthusiasm has a structural quality rather than being exclusively issue-driven.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court under its liberal majority has already forced new legislative maps by striking down a Republican gerrymander and restored ballot drop boxes. With a 5-2 majority secured through 2030, the court is positioned to rule on congressional redistricting — Wisconsin’s congressional map remains heavily gerrymandered in Republicans’ favor — as well as voting rights cases from the 2026 and 2028 elections, and a challenge to the Scott Walker-era law that eliminated collective bargaining for most public workers.
As crypto.news has reported, the composition of Congress and state governments after November’s midterms directly shapes the pace and direction of US crypto regulation, including GENIUS Act implementation and market structure legislation. As crypto.news has noted, stablecoin legislation and digital asset market structure bills require sustained congressional engagement; the midterm environment that Taylor’s margin and Harris’s Georgia performance are signaling would produce a very different congressional calculus than the one that currently exists. Liberals will have another opportunity to expand their Wisconsin court majority in 2027, when conservative Justice Annette Ziegler will not seek a third term.