Tammy Baldwin’s Tough Reelection Fight in Hyperpolarized Wisconsin
“You couldn’t have two more different people,” Scot Ross, who leads the progressive group One Wisconsin Now, told me. [New York Magazine]
“You couldn’t have two more different people,” Scot Ross, who leads the progressive group One Wisconsin Now, told me. [New York Magazine]
First thing Walker does in the morning is check the polls, stick his finger in the air, and then figure out how to spend our tax dollars based on the first two. [Vox]
Bill McCoshen and Scot Ross join NBC15's Leigh Mills to help Unspin Tammy Baldwin and Scott Walker Fundraising Reports. [WMTV-TV]
“It is just another way that Tammy is stepping up for the things she believes in,” said Jenni Dye, research director of the liberal advocacy group One Wisconsin Now. [Associated Press]
“Today, Tammy Baldwin stood up for the people of Wisconsin and Ron Johnson stood up for Donald Trump.”
"It is just another way that Tammy is stepping up for the things she believes in," said Jenni Dye, research director of the liberal advocacy group One Wisconsin Now. [Miami Herald]
"It is just another way that Tammy is stepping up for the things she believes in," said Jenni Dye, research director of One Wisconsin Now. [Associated Press]
One Wisconsin Now, said Walker’s remarks were aimed at Wisconsin's Democratic U.S. Senator, Tammy Baldwin. [Wisconsin Public Radio]
One Wisconsin Now, said the real reason for the news conference was "to attack Tammy Baldwin because they cannot get a credible candidate against her." [Associated Press]
The Democratic senator was joined on the call by One Wisconsin Now research director Jenni Dye and Legal Progress vice president Michele Jawando. [Capital Times]
One Wisconsin Now executive director Scot Ross said Johnson's comments added "insult to injury" for Wisconsin's student loan borrowers. [Capital Times]
President Barack Obama will visit Wisconsin three times during the five days before the election to lock up votes in a battleground state where polls now show him leading Republican Mitt Romney. His trips also could help another Democrat locked in tight race: U.S. Senate candidate Tammy Baldwin. She plans to appear with Obama at every event, including a Monday rally […] [San Francisco Chronicle]