Joe Timmerman | Wisconsin Watch | Getty Images
The elections Tuesday underscore strong headwinds for President Donald Trump and his Republicans ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, which could shift the balance of power in Washington and loosen Trump’s grip on power.
Democratic-backed Appeals Court Judge Chris Taylor won a 10-year term on Wisconsin’s Supreme Court, defeating conservative Appeals Court Judge Maria Lazar by roughly 20 percentage points, according to the Associated Press tally.
The race was far more subdued than last year’s Supreme Court contest in Wisconsin, which turned into the most expensive state supreme court race in history after Tesla owner Elon Musk injected huge sums of money to support the Republican-backed conservative candidate, who lost.
Meanwhile in Georgia, Republican Clayton Fuller defeated Democrat Shawn Harris by a roughly 12 percentage point margin in a special election runoff for a House of Representatives seat vacated by former GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, according to the Associated Press tally. The win for the Trump-backed Fuller will pad the narrow Republican majority in the House, which sits at 217 Republicans to 214 Democrats — an effective one-vote margin on any party-line vote for Speaker Mike Johnson.
The win may offer little solace for Republicans, however, as Democrats overperformed in the contest. Greene carried the district by 29 percentage points in 2024, more than double Fuller’s margin of victory.
The result could be a good sign for Democrats, who are hoping to retain Sen. Jon Ossoff‘s Senate seat in the Peach State to have any chance at gaining a majority in the Senate.
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