Among renters in Wisconsin, 39% are considered rent-burdened, spending more than 30% of their income on rent. That compares with 50% of renters nationally who are considered rent-burdened. The post Wisconsin Election Results: Swing State Where Home Prices Rose 57% in 5 Years Votes Red appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.
Wisconsin was a key battleground state in the 2024 presidential election between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump, with 10 electoral votes at stake.
Senate Democrat Tammy Baldwin won re-election Tuesday because she outperformed her party’s standard-bearer, Kamala Harris, across most of Wisconsin, but especially in smaller counties where former President Donald Trump made his biggest gains and in election wards with lower incomes and lower rates of college education.
As of about 4 p.m. Tuesday, at least 3,415,306 Wisconsinites had voted in the presidential election, per the Associated Press. That's with 99% of the vote reported and not including write-in votes for president, meaning the final voter total will be higher.
Republicans retained key congressional seats in Wisconsin with a third race still undecided early Wednesday morning. U.S. Rep.
Democratic Senator Tammy Baldwin declared victory early Wednesday morning in Wisconsin's tightly contested U.S. Senate race against Republican challenger Eric Hovde.
Wisconsin Sen. Tammy Baldwin has won a third term, delivering a victory for Democrats in the swing state that President-elect Donald Trump carried
Donald J. Trump flipped Wisconsin, according to The Associated Press, taking him over the 270 electoral college votes needed to win the overall presidential race, and handing him a battleground state that he narrowly lost in 2020 to Joseph R. Biden Jr.
New legislative district boundaries didn’t pay off quite as well as Wisconsin Democrats hoped for in Tuesday’s elections
Tammy Baldwin was declared the winner over Eric Hovde on 49.4 percent of the vote compared to 48.5 percent, according to AP.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court heard oral arguments Monday on whether a law that legislators adopted more than a decade before the Civil War bans abortion and can still be enforced.