logo
Voting in Wisconsin's governor's race is a year away, but the ads are starting

Voting in Wisconsin's governor's race is a year away, but the ads are starting

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Wisconsin's race for governor is hitting the airwaves more than a year before voting begins.
Republican candidate Bill Berrien announced the purchase of about $400,000 in cable TV, radio and online ads Monday. The buy comes 13 months before the Aug. 11, 2026, primary. Berrien is the first candidate to purchase ads of any kind in the race.
Berrien and Washington County Executive Josh Schoemann have announced bids as Republicans. It is the first campaign for each of them. Several other Republicans, including U.S. Rep. Tom Tiffany, two-time losing U.S. Senate candidate Eric Hovde and state Senate President Mary Felzkowski are all considering running.
Schoemann has been traveling the state and meeting with voters since he launched his campaign in May, but he has yet to spend any money on ads like Berrien is doing.
'Money buys ads, but as we've seen far too often in Wisconsin, it can't buy wins,' Schoemann adviser Ben Voelkel said. 'It takes hard work and authenticity to earn voters' support, not just slick ads.'
Democratic Gov. Tony Evers hasn't said whether he will seek a third term. He has suggested that he will announce his decision within weeks. A spokesperson for Evers had no immediate comment on the Berrien ads.
Berrien's ads are slated to begin airing Tuesday, less than a week after he launched his campaign. The ads lean into Berrien's support for President Donald Trump, which has been questioned by influential conservative talk radio hosts.
Berrien criticized Trump's handling of the COVD-19 pandemic and said during an August 2020 interview with Fox Business that he hadn't decided whether to support Trump for president that year. In 2024, Berrien supported former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley's run for president in the GOP primary and donated more than $30,000 to her campaign.
Berrien was also a member of the bipartisan group Democracy Found, which advocates for using ranked-choice voting and making primaries nonpartisan. But Berrien told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel last week that he no longer supports those ideas.
Berrien is positioning himself as a staunch Trump backer in his first ads of the race. They are airing statewide, but with an emphasis on Milwaukee and Green Bay, his campaign said. The largest number of Republican voters in the state are in the Milwaukee media market, and Green Bay is a critical GOP area, especially in primaries.
In the ads, Berrien calls himself 'an outsider and a businessman just like President Trump.' Berrien says he's running for governor to 'advance the Trump agenda, shake up Madison and put Wisconsin citizens first.'
Berrien, 56, served nine years as a Navy SEAL and has been owner and CEO of Pindel Global Precision and Liberty Precision, manufacturers of precision-machined components in New Berlin, a Milwaukee suburb, for the past 13 years.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Former Biden adviser admits failure to address border crisis reality led to Trump's re-election
Former Biden adviser admits failure to address border crisis reality led to Trump's re-election

Fox News

time29 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Former Biden adviser admits failure to address border crisis reality led to Trump's re-election

Former Biden border adviser Blas Nuñez-Neto wrote in the New York Times on Tuesday that the administration's failure to address and act on the border crisis contributed to President Donald Trump's re-election. "The first step in responding to a crisis is to acknowledge it exists," Nuñez-Neto wrote. "The surge in illegal crossings at our southern border during the first three years of Joe Biden's presidency was, by any reasonable definition, a crisis. The failure to acknowledge this reality and take timely action to try to resolve it cost Democrats a great deal of trust with American voters and contributed to President Trump's return to the White House." Nuñez-Neto was the assistant secretary for border and immigration policy at the Department of Homeland Security under former President Joe Biden. He described experiencing "a tidal wave" of illegal entries at the border in 2021. The Biden aide said economic devastation from the Coronavirus pandemic was a factor but also acknowledged "a lack of resources" at the border and "the inability to deport people to countries like Venezuela" as issues that contributed to the numbers. "Deliberations that delayed important policy choices didn't help, either," he wrote. Nuñez-Neto added, "By the time Mr. Biden and congressional Democrats began working in earnest with Republicans in late 2023 and 2024 on revamping our immigration laws, the politics were hopelessly interwoven with the presidential election, which is why a tough, bipartisan bill ultimately foundered." Though he conceded that the border was more secure now than under Biden, Nuñez-Neto warned that this was done at the cost of "eroding our constitutional order." Instead, he argued, Congress needed to step in and provide a system that can be both generous to legal applicants and strict with people living in the United States illegally. "In other words, we need a system that recognizes that we are not only a nation of immigrants but also a nation of laws and that we need to respect both. Until that happens, the next border crisis will always be just around the corner," he concluded. Despite Nuñez-Neto's criticism of the Biden administration's border policies, his op-ed drew intense backlash online. Nuñez-Neto's former department, Homeland Security, took to X to mock him. "'I was Humpty Dumpty. Here's how to sit on a wall,'" the Homeland Security page wrote. Illegal border crossings reached record highs under Biden, with 249,785 Border Patrol apprehensions being recorded in December 2023. Under Trump, border encounters dropped by over 90% within his first few months in office.

Trump to sign legislation cracking down on illicit fentanyl
Trump to sign legislation cracking down on illicit fentanyl

CNN

time29 minutes ago

  • CNN

Trump to sign legislation cracking down on illicit fentanyl

President Donald Trump will host congressional leaders and families affected by the fentanyl epidemic on Wednesday for a signing ceremony on bipartisan legislation that would strengthen prison sentences for fentanyl traffickers, White House officials tell CNN. The Halt All Lethal Trafficking of Fentanyl Act, which recently passed both the Senate and the House with bipartisan support, represents a key priority for the president who has claimed the illicit flow of fentanyl is one of the underlying reasons for his tariff threats against Canada, Mexico and China. The bill will place all fentanyl-related substances, specifically, copycat versions of the drug, on the US Drug Enforcement Administration's list of most dangerous drugs, classifying them as Schedule I under the Controlled Substances Act. The Trump administration argues the move will limit the incentive for cartels to create new synthetic, fentanyl-like drugs to evade the reach of the Controlled Substances Act. 'Under the HALT Fentanyl Act, anyone who possesses, imports, distributes, or manufactures any illicit FRS (fentanyl-related substances) will be subject to criminal prosecution in the same manner as any other Schedule I controlled substance,' a White House document on the legislation obtained by CNN reads. 'First, we close the loopholes criminals use to skirt around the law. Second, we make it easier for law enforcement to prosecute those criminals,' the document says. While the legislation has received strong bipartisan support, some critics argue the bill could lead to harsh penalties for millions of people struggling with drug addiction, especially Black Americans. The White House event, scheduled for 3 p.m. on Wednesday, will prominently feature families who have lost loved ones due to fentanyl use, including activist Anne Funder, who lost her eldest son — 15-year-old Weston — to fentanyl poisoning. Funder was also a speaker at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee last year, where she called on the government to do more to deal with the fentanyl crisis in the US. Gregory Swan, whose son Drew died of fentanyl poisoning, will also speak. In the years following his son's death, Swan started a group known as Fentanyl Fathers, in which parents tell their story to high schools across America. Jacqueline Siegel, the founder of Victoria's Voice, an organization born from the loss of her 18-year-old daughter Victoria to a drug overdose in 2015, is also expected to speak. House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune will attend the ceremony, the officials said. GOP Sens. Chuck Grassley, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, and Bill Cassidy — who introduced the legislation with Democratic Sen. Martin Heinrich — will also be in attendance. Several organizations that have backed the legislation will also join the president for the ceremony, the officials said, including the Fraternal Order of Police and anti-immigration groups the Center for Immigration Studies and Federation for American Immigration Reform, among other drug, immigration and law enforcement groups.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store