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Trump, Republicans venture to blue areas in Wisconsin to boost GOP turnout

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Trump, Republicans venture to blue areas in Wisconsin to boost GOP turnout

MADISON, Wis. — Former President Donald Trump and Republicans across the swing state of Wisconsin are ramping up campaign efforts everywhere, including deep blue areas, to close the margins. 

“In a state this tight, we have to get votes in every single corner of the state,” Wisconsin Republican Party Executive Director Andrew Iverson told Fox News Digital.

“Closing the margins just a little bit makes a huge difference,” he said.

HERE’S WHAT 2 UNDECIDED WISCONSIN VOTERS ARE HOLDING OUT FOR IN 2024 ELECTION

Trump rallied in the traditionally blue enclave of Dane County in Wisconsin. (Getty Images)

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This is paired with “running up the score in red counties.”

The reason such an approach is necessary, he said, is “this election will likely come down to 20,000-30,000 votes.”

In 2016, Trump defeated Democrat presidential nominee Hillary Clinton in Wisconsin by one point and less than 30,000 votes. When President Biden beat Trump in the state during the next election in 2020, it was similarly by about 20,000 votes. 

Now, Wisconsin is once again expected to be a deciding factor in the presidential election. 

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A woman dons a cheese hat with an American flag on it in Wisconsin. (Reuters)

“I would highlight that the Republican Party of Wisconsin and the Republican National Committee (RNC) – we have over 100 staff on the ground in Wisconsin, and we have 40 field offices,” Iverson explained.

“So we have a great presence across the entire state.”

According to him, the path to victory for Republicans relies on pulling “votes in every single corner of the state.”

He pointed to Trump’s decision to hold a rally in Dane County, home to the state capital of Madison, Wisconsin. “Republicans are going where we traditionally may not always go,” he said.  

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Hundreds came out to see Trump in Dane County. (Getty Images)

Iverson described Dane as “the most liberal county in the state of Wisconsin,” and said Trump’s trip there is “because he has to get votes in every single county and turn out Republicans in every part of the state.”

Former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson, a Republican, told reporters earlier this month at a press conference in Milwaukee, “Donald Trump called me and asked me, how do I carry Wisconsin?”

The longest-serving Wisconsin governor, who was in office from 1987 to 2001, said he told Trump to follow his lead, “You got to go into southwestern Wisconsin.”

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“I said to the president, you’ve got to come into Dane County. There hasn’t been a presidential candidate in Dane County since 1996, when Bob Dole ran for president. Republicans stay away. I said, we have to go.”

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Thompson revealed his advice to Trump on winning Wisconsin. (Reuters)

Trump’s visit to the blue stronghold that same day drew massive crowds, despite the county’s reputation. Thompson remarked that there was a “huge crowd all the way from the airport to the factory,” where the event was held.

This attention to heavily Democratic-voting areas of the state is a departure from previous Republicans’ strategy, as the former governor noted. 

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Iverson told Fox News Digital that while the election cycle is quite polarized and many people are decided on their candidate, “there’s a rather decent segment of voters who are still undecided, and they’ll be making up their decision until the moment they vote.” 

“That’s why it’s so important that we are out there talking to as many voters as possible, because each conversation that we could have could be the last conversation they have with voters before they go and vote,” he said. 

Wisconsin was rated a “Toss up” by Fox News Power rankings, as of late last month. 

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.

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North Dakota

North Dakota’s new ‘I voted’ sticker says ‘You betcha’

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North Dakota’s new ‘I voted’ sticker says ‘You betcha’


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  • A Bottineau County election official’s design won North Dakota’s “I voted” sticker contest.
  • The winning design was chosen from 478 entries after a public vote on five finalists.
  • Two million new stickers will be distributed for the 2026 primary and general elections.

About 2 million new “I voted” stickers are on their way to North Dakota after a Bottineau election official’s design was selected as the winner of the state’s election sticker design contest.

Haylee Senger, deputy auditor of Bottineau County, said her “You betcha, I voted” design was inspired by a Midwestern-themed sticker that said “Ope.”

“Then I got designing, and it kind of came to life,” Senger said. “I just thought it would be fun.”

Secretary of State Michael Howe unveiled the new sticker Thursday at the Heritage Center in Bismarck during a conference for North Dakota election officials.

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“An ‘I voted’ sticker, it’s a proclamation that you’ve had your voice heard, that you care about your community and it is a point of civic pride,” Howe said.Howe’s office received 478 sticker entries from 72 North Dakota communities. Designers ranged in age from kindergarten students to grandparents. Five finalists were selected, and North Dakotans were able to vote for their favorite design in January, Howe said.

Gov. Kelly Armstrong spoke during the conference and told state election officials that even though Republicans and Democrats have different ideas on how to preserve election integrity, they can both agree that North Dakota runs its elections well, which was a testament to everyone in the auditorium.

“The vast, vast, vast majority of the silent majority of North Dakotans are proud of how our elections are run,” Armstrong said. “I trust our elections in North Dakota.”

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For example, Armstrong said North Dakota was one of 24 states during the 2024 election cycle where less than 10% of in-person voters on Election Day needed to wait in line for longer than 30 minutes.

The new “You betcha, I voted” stickers will be available during the 2026 primary and general elections with the leftover stickers being used in future elections until the supplies run out.

North Dakota Monitor is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.



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Ohio

Our voting records aren’t Trump’s damn business. LaRose sold Ohio out. | Letters

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Our voting records aren’t Trump’s damn business. LaRose sold Ohio out. | Letters


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  • Ohio’s Secretary of State is criticized for turning over the state’s voter registration database to the Department of Justice.
  • A local craft brewer urges the Ohio General Assembly to override the governor’s veto of a bill concerning THC-infused beverages.
  • A reader questions the salaries and job creation record of JobsOhio.
  • Another letter writer argues that Les Wexner could have prevented further harm by Jeffrey Epstein.
  • Readers calls for increased oversight of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Our voting records aren’t Trump’s damn business

What possible justification could Secretary of State Frank LaRose have for turning over Ohio’s voter registration database to President Donald Trump’s “Department of Justice”?

Note: With Pam Bondi in charge as U.S. attorney general, it is no longer the United States DOJ, it is now an extension of the Trump administration, charged with shielding and protecting one man from any and all accusations of corruption. 

What could possibly go wrong with our voter data records?For starters, Trump wouldn’t know the truth if he ran it down with the presidential limo.

LaRose created a horrendous lie in November 2024 when he crafted ballot language for State Issue I, (the anti-gerrymandering initiative) that purposefully misled voters to vote against what they wanted to happen. Ohio Republicans celebrated the outcome.Trump is hell-bent on suppressing “free and fair” voting because he fears losing his power, (and administrative protection from prosecution) to a likely Democrat landslide in congressional elections this November.

 LaRose understands Trump’s fear and hopes to position himself favorably for some future state or, better yet, federal political appointment.

 So why not submit to the demand to turn over our personal information contained in the voter records?The best and only necessary reason I can think of is that the U.S. Constitution mandates that elections are run at the state level BY the states, NOT the federal government. So, regardless of what Pam Bondi says, (and who could doubt her motives?) Ohio’s voter data is no damn business of the federal government.Sadly, unlike election officials in Washington D.C. and 29 other states, LaRose does not have the courage or the character to stand up for us and say: “Hell no!” And he wants us to make him Ohio auditor? Hell NO! Jeff Reeder, Columbus

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DeWine creating unnecessary chaos for my business

As a local craft brewer, I was deeply disappointed by the governor’s recent line-item veto of Ohio Senate Bill 56’s THC-infused beverage timeline.

Ohio restaurants and breweries, like mine, explored this market, responded to changing consumer demand and invested in order to responsibly and safely produce our low-dose hemp-derived THC beverages.

The line-item veto pulled the rug out from underneath our businesses and unnecessarily punishes state-licensed operators who have operated within the law.

The 180-day timeline originally included in Senate Bill 56 gave businesses time to sell through inventory, striking a reasonable balance between regulation and economic fairness, and allowed for future discussions on commonsense regulation.

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The line-item veto forces us to eliminate product by mid-March, months earlier than expected and will create unnecessary chaos, financial losses and wasted product.

This sudden change has real consequences for small business owners, especially in an economy where margins are already tight.

I urge the Ohio General Assembly to override the governor’s line-item veto on SB 56. Doing so would restore the original timeline and respect the businesses like mine that followed the rules.

 Collin Castore, Seventh Son Brewing Co., Columbus

Nice work if you can get it

JobsOhio seems to be involved with the resignation of former Ohio State President Ted Carter.

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On that topic, we are guaranteed to hear more. What I want to know is how do I get a job with THEM?

I know they all make a lot of money for themselves with VERY large salaries. Exactly how large? Who pays for it? How many jobs have they actually created? What are those salaries?

Please investigate.

Syd Lifshin, Columbus

Wexner wasn’t duped

Re “Guilt by association is not a crime,” Feb. 25: I don’t necessarily disagree with writer Bary Alan Leeman about Les Wexner being duped. He became too full of himself and overthrew a years-long trusted accountant for the high-flying life of Jeffrey Epstein.

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However, he covered up a multimillion-dollar theft to save face. How many of us can afford to do that?

Just think if he had sued Epstein. Perhaps a hundred young women might have been saved from the trauma that Epstein and Ghislaine exposed them to.

Also, in case you hadn’t noticed, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Wexner BOTH used virtually the same words to describe their trips with their families to Epstein Island. We were cruising the Caribbean with our families and just stopped by for an hour for lunch.

Libby Wetherholt, Columbus

Keep ICE on the hook

With the initiation of Operation Epic Fury in Iran, coverage of mmigration and Customs Enforcementactivities has been quite limited recently.

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But now is the time to be razor-focused on ICE.

The Department of Homeland Security funding bill pending in the U.S. Senate is the best vehicle to force needed operational changes and safeguards at ICE — prevent another Minneapolis!

Don’t let the White House’s strategy of “flooding the zone” — putting so many issues out there you lose focus on other important issues — distract you from a key issue here at home that needs to be resolved: the goals and operations of ICE agents and leadership.

Kristi Noem was dismissed as DHS Cabinet Secretary last week. But her dismissal DOES NOT negate the need for procedural/operational changes at ICE — changes broadly supported by the American public. These changes would require ICE agents to wear badges and name tags, do away with masks, obtain judicial warrants for arrests or home entry, end racial profiling, downgrade ICE garb from military combat to law enforcement, and focus on violent criminals rather than undocumented immigrants.

To get these safeguards, you need to immediately contact your U.S. representative and senators and insist for their inclusion in the final DHS funding bill.

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Marty Kress, Columbus

We are the new Russia

U.S. leaders knew Iran was no military threat to us. They still acted as if the bombing of another country for their oil and land was a must for defending the U.S.

This nation is now emulating the Russian invasion of other countries to take over their lands and resources.

When asked if there were any limits on his international power, President Donald Trump told the New York Times, “My own morality. My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop me.” Trump said, “I don’t need international law.” 

A Republican leader, Senator Lindsey Graham, remarked about bombing Iran, “We are going to make a ton of money. … Venezuela and Iran have 31% of the world’s oil reserves. … This is a good investment.”

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Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, when asked if the demolition of Iran was an opportunity more than an imminent threat, replied, “I think much of that discussion is silly and academic.”

The daunting questions now are: Who and what justifies the sending of U.S. military troops to invade and blow up a country? Do we recognize the sovereignty of nations? Do we send military troops to take over resources and land because we want them?

Wonder what World War II soldiers would think? 

Jean Gawronski, Powell



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South Dakota

Military family members say more support services needed in eastern South Dakota

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Military family members say more support services needed in eastern South Dakota


In the Moment

In the Moment tells true stories of our state and true stories of people who are doing something or creating something for a reason. We tell these stories with fairness, compassion and imagination through podcasts, news stories, and more.





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