Midwest
Abortion, 'free' education among top issues for Harris voters
MILWAUKEE – Abortion and education are among the top issues for Democrat voters in key battleground state Wisconsin, as VP Harris takes over the helm of the Democratic Party and inches closer to securing the DNC presidential nomination next month.
In a packed high school auditorium in West Allis, rucous rallygoers told Fox News Digital that a woman’s “right to choose” is a fundamental party platform policy that has their vote locked in for Harris this November, as well as “free” public education.
Just outside the venue, faint chants of “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” drifted from a small counterprotest. Nearby, a solitary Trump flag waved high, epitomizing the charged battleground atmosphere.
Supporters of Vice President Kamala Harris react to her speaking during a campaign rally at West Allis Central High School on July 23, 2024 in West Allis, Wisconsin. Harris made her first campaign appearance as the party’s presidential candidate, with an endorsement from President Biden. (Photo by Jim Vondruska/Getty Images)
Lester Pines, a Harris supporter and attorney, told Fox News Digital in Milwaukee that what’s “important for Wisconsin voters first of all, is the right to choose.”
“And it’s a fundamental issue in this state. Because before the Wisconsin Supreme Court, in state law matters, and it has to be protected federally, and commonly, Harris will protect that,” he said.
Lt. Governor of Wisconsin Sara Rodriguez, another supporter of Harris at her first campaign stop as the presumptive Democratic nominee, told Fox News Digital that “reproductive rights” are at the top of the list for Democrat voters.
“You’ve probably heard that in this room, whenever she talks about [reproductive rights] people were very, very animated,” Rodriguez said. “I’m a nurse by background, I know how dangerous it is when women do not have full access to reproductive care. She’s going to fight for that for us here in Wisconsin. And people know, she’s the only one doing that.”
HARRIS REPEATS DEBUNKED CLAIM TRUMP WANTS TO ‘BAN’ ABORTION DURING FIRST CAMPAIGN RALLY SINCE BIDEN QUIT RACE
Supporters of Vice President Kamala Harris gather in a high school auditorium in Milwaukee, Wisconsin for her first rally since President Biden dropped out of the 2024 presidential race. (Fox News Digital/Jamie Joseph)
Chairman of the Wisconsin Democrat Party, Ben Wickler, told Fox News Digital at the rally that Harris is “speaking exactly to people’s greatest hopes for a country that works for everyone, that honors working people, where folks can join a union where they can expand the freedom, the freedom to vote, to make their own decisions about their own body, instead of politicians telling them what to do.”
Wickler also said it’s an opportune moment for Democrats in Wisconsin spanning across rural, suburban, and urban areas to support workers’ ability to unionize, as well as protect abortion providers against charges. In Wisconsin, abortion is legal up to 22 weeks in Madison, Milwaukee, and Sheboygan.
“And if you’re concerned about whether the government should be able to jail doctors for providing health care, if you think that workers should be able to join a union, this is a great moment because there’s tremendous hope across the country and an opportunity to move forward,” he said.
RNC DELEGATES IN MILWAUKEE REVEALED WHAT SHOULD HAPPEN WITH BIDEN OUT OF THE RACE: ‘IT DOESN’T MATTER’
Vice President Kamala Harris speaks to supporters during a campaign rally at West Allis Central High School on July 23, 2024 in West Allis, Wisconsin. Harris made her first campaign appearance as the partys presidential candidate, with an endorsement from President Biden. (Photo by Jim Vondruska/Getty Images) (Jim Vondruska / Stringer)
Kat Lee, a former educator at the rally echoed Wickler and Rodriguez, saying, “Obviously, education is the most important one to me, because the education system is upside down.”
A couple who have a college-aged daughter also told Fox News Digital that lowering tuition costs and capping loan paybacks are what they’re hoping will happen under a Harris administration.
“So many of us want to stress our kids to go to college, but who wants to pay back all of the tuitions and the funding and you don’t have it you know,” a rallygoer said. “So I know that she’s like, ‘Mom, how I’m gonna pay back all of this? So those things are really important.”
Amy Turkoski, a rallygoer representing local teacher’s union Madison Teacher’s Inc., told Fox News Digital she’s concerned about funding for public schools.
“We need to change how we fund public school in the United States, public schools should be free and appropriate for all students,” Turkoski said. “And the way the Republican Party and the other side of the aisle has really systematically defunded public education. Now that Kamala is running with Biden’s blessing, I feel really energized that we’ll find someone who really wants to change how we fund public education.”
DEM VOTERS AT MILWAUKEE RALLY SAY THEY’RE FIRED UP FOR HARRIS: ‘UNITED AND ENERGIZED’
VP Harris drew a large crowd Tuesday afternoon in West Allis, Wisconsin, at a rally as she takes over the helm in the Democrat party. (Jamie Joseph/Fox News Digital)
The rally comes amid a backdrop of rearranging within the Democratic Party after President Biden’s abrupt exit from the race on Sunday. Shortly after he suspended his re-election campaign amid internal party pressure, Biden endorsed Harris, saying on X she has his “full support.”
Concerns about Biden’s aging and mental acuity have been building up since his first disastrous debate performance against Trump last month, followed by subsequent public gaffes. Congressional Democrats raised the temperature and added to the pressure, as top leaders urged him to drop out of the race in the days leading up to his announcement.
Democrats in Wisconsin have launched a unified effort to bolster Harris’ presidential campaign, according to Brianna Johnson, the campaign’s Wisconsin Communications Director. The initiative includes 48 coordinated offices spread across 43 counties, employing approximately 160 full-time staffers who are actively engaged in door-to-door canvassing, phone outreach, and mobilizing community support for Harris and Democratic candidates ahead of November’s elections.
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Milwaukee, WI
Milwaukee County gets $25M federal grant for 67 road safety projects
See the aftermath of high-speed reckless driving in Milwaukee
Journalist James Causey and his wife narrowly escaped a high-speed chase and accident when an SUV ran past them and through an intersection, colliding with a Mercedes.
Milwaukee County will receive nearly $25 million in federal funding for 67 traffic safety projects along 10 of the county’s most hazardous roadways, according to a Jan. 12 announcement from County Executive David Crowley’s office.
That funding will support upgrades for pedestrian infrastructure, intersections and high-speed corridors in Milwaukee, West Allis, Glendale, Brown Deer, Shorewood and on multiple county highways.
Collectively, these projects could reduce fatal and serious injury crashes in hazardous areas by 26%–50% and save an estimated $1.2 billion in car crash costs over 20 years, according to the announcement.
Preliminary designs are anticipated to begin in 2027, with all projects completed by 2031.
The funding comes through the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Safe Streets and Roads for All Grant, which the county’s Department of Transportation applied for in 2025 as part of its Complete Communities Transportation Planning Project, an initiative to increase safety and reduce reckless driving across its roadways.
Already, the county has analyzed crash data, identified 25 “Corridors of Concern,” and reviewed potential project opportunities.
Milwaukee County’s award amounts to the third-largest grant in the federal program’s 2025 funding cycle. It will be managed by the county and distributed to the five municipal recipients.
The municipalities will lead the projects and provide a 20% local match to support costs.
More details about the projects’ locations will be posted on the transportation department’s website, according to the announcement.
The 65 infrastructure projects and two studies enabled by the grant aim to improve safety along 10 hazardous roadways the county has identified.
Pedestrian infrastructure upgrades will include high-visibility crosswalks, upgraded pedestrian walk signals, restricting right-turn-on-red options, and sidewalk network expansion.
Intersection upgrades will include traffic signal upgrades, better visibility for pedestrians, bump-outs, and select geometric realignments. High-speed corridor upgrades will entail traffic calming improvements that help drivers stay in their lanes.
One of the projects will also seek to reduce reckless driving on the 16th Street viaduct, the 27th Street viaduct and the 35th Street viaduct.
The grant will also fund a safety analysis study on West Lincoln Avenue between South 124th Street and South 52nd Street, which will issue recommendations for future projects. The grant will also fund a county Department of Transportation report assessing the county’s progress toward the Vision Zero goal.
Contact Claudia Levens at clevens@usatodayco.com. Follow her on X at @levensc13.
Minneapolis, MN
Thousands protest in Minneapolis over fatal ICE shooting – video
Thousands of people protested in Minneapolis, Minnesota over the weekend to decry the fatal shooting of 37‑year‑old Renee Good by a US immigration agent, one of more than 1,000 rallies planned nationwide against the federal government’s deportation drive. Demonstrators marched towards the residential street where Good was shot in her car and mourned at a makeshift memorial
Indianapolis, IN
Meet The Indiana University Indianapolis Librarian Billy Tringali
BILLY TRINGALI’S OFFICE at IU Indianapolis feels more like a Comic-Con booth than an academic’s hidey hole. Posters of saucer-eyed anime and manga heroes cover every vertical surface, and memorabilia line every horizontal one. “It’s like an open-air museum,” Tringali says. “There’s not an inch of wall that’s not covered.”
Tringali is IU’s instruction librarian for undergraduate health sciences, which sounds pretty buttoned up. Until he starts talking about what it entails. “I teach students to hunt things down,” he says. “I do basic AI literacy training. Essentially explaining that you don’t just trust what a chatbot says, because it’s probably lying to you.”
But that’s only part of the story. In addition to his day job, Tringali is also founder and editor of the Journal of Anime and Manga Studies, which makes him arguably one of the world’s leading voices in the scholarly study of the subject.Anime has exploded in the U.S., fueled in part by its omnipresence on streaming services such as Netflix. And manga with titles like My Hero Academia and One Piece are wildly popular among younger readers. Well, not just younger readers. Plenty of grown-ups read them too.
Tringali says people are attracted to anime and manga for simple reasons: accessibility and variety. There’s decades’ worth of materials to read and watch, with subject matter ranging from horror, to adventure, to esoteric philosophic ramblings—sometimes all three in the same work. “Whatever interests you, it exists in anime, and there is a massive backlog for you to explore,” Tringali says. “Anime and manga can be powerful teaching tools for enhancing cultural understanding and improving language skills.”
In addition to reading and watching pretty much everything in the anime/manga world, he’s also analyzed this corner of the pop culture universe in great detail. His journal is the only open access academic periodical that exclusively publishes works discussing the worlds of anime, manga, cosplay, and their fans. What began as a graduate school project now attracts scholars and aficionados from around the world. Every year, Tringali helps run a standing-room-only academic conference at Anime Expo in Los Angeles. “We pack the house,” he says. “Fans are really, really hungry for academic analysis of popular culture.”
His influence is such that within the community he’s known as the anime apostle. He got hooked on the genre early, spending his childhood sitting on his grandmother’s “horrendously purple” living room rug watching endless episodes of Pokémon. When he realized his local library didn’t offer manga, he established a substantial collection simply by donating books from his own trove. “I watched them all being cataloged and thought, Oh, this is going to be a huge problem for me,” Tringali recalls.
Today, his enthusiasm burns just as hot as it did during his Jigglypuff-besotted youth. He channels his devotion by helping students see not only the academic value in his favorite pop culture genre but also the importance of other subcultures. For instance, he’s developing a student sewing circle for cosplay fans who dress up as characters to learn how to sew their own costumes. For the anime apostle, it’s all about spreading the word.
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