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Wisconsin’s Supreme Court flips to Liberal Control

Justice-elect Judge Janet Protasiewicz will be sworn in Tuesday as Wisconsin’s next state Supreme Court justice, a move that will shift the balance of the state’s high court from a majority of conservative justices to liberal. Protasiewicz, a Milwaukee County Circuit Court judge, beat former Justice Daniel Kelly in April. Several high-profile cases are now expected before the state’s high court, including Wisconsin’s 1849 abortion ban, the state’s legislative maps and election laws and results. The Associated Press has the story:

Wisconsin’s Supreme Court flips to Liberal Control

Newslooks- MADISON, Wis. (AP)

The Wisconsin Supreme Court flips to liberal control for the first time in 15 years Tuesday with the start of the term of a new justice who made abortion rights a focus of her winning campaign.

Janet Protasiewicz will be sworn into office with a ceremony in the state Capitol Rotunda, the type of pomp and circumstance typically reserved for governors. Protasiewicz’s win carries tremendous weight in Wisconsin, a battleground where the state Supreme Court has been the last word on some of the biggest political and policy battles of the past decade-plus.

The conservative-controlled court came within one vote of overturning President Joe Biden’s narrow win in the state in 2020, though Biden still would have had enough electoral votes to claim the presidency. More battles over voting rules and elections are expected leading up to 2024, along with challenges to the state’s abortion ban, Republican-drawn political boundary lines and a host of other hot-button political issues.

FILE – Supreme Court candidate Janet Protasiewicz gets a kiss from her husband Greg Sell while speaking at her election night watch party in Milwaukee, Wis., on Tuesday, April 4, 2023. The Wisconsin Supreme Court is flipping to liberal control for the first time in 15 years with the start of the term of a new justice who made abortion rights a focus of her winning campaign. Janet Protasiewicz will be sworn into office Tuesday, Aug. 1, 2023, with a ceremony in the state Capitol Rotunda. (Mike De Sisti /Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel via AP)

Protasiewicz, a Milwaukee County judge, ran with backing and deep financial support from Democrats, abortion rights groups and other liberals in the officially nonpartisan race. She handily defeated her conservative opponent in April, raising expectations among liberals that the new court will soon do away with the state’s abortion ban, order new maps to be drawn and ensure a long line of Democratic success after 15 years of rulings that largely favored Republicans.

Even as liberals have high hopes that the new court will rule in their favor, there are no guarantees. Republicans were angered when a conservative candidate they backed in 2019 turned out to sometimes side with liberal justices.

Protasiewicz replaces retiring conservative Justice Pat Roggensack, who served 20 years, including six as chief justice.

While it may be a while before the court weighs in on some topics, a new lawsuit challenging the GOP-drawn legislative and congressional district maps is expected to be filed within weeks. And there is already a pending case challenging Wisconsin’s pre-Civil War era abortion ban, and a county judge ruled last month that it can proceed, while also calling into question whether the law actually bans abortions.

The rules for voting and elections are also expected to come before the court heading into the 2024 presidential election.

A national Democratic law firm filed a lawsuit last month seeking to undo a Wisconsin Supreme Court ruling last year banning absentee ballot drop boxes.

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