Wisconsin
House fire near Michigan-Wisconsin border leaves 2 dead
IRONWOOD, MI — The Ironwood Public Safety Department confirmed two people were killed Sunday in a fire at a house on Greenbush Street. According to a press release, the department was contacted just before 7 am. for reports of an active structure fire.
Crews arrived on scene and found the house fully engulfed in flames, but the fire was extinguished by 7:45 a.m. When officers entered the home they discovered two deceased people inside. The names of the victims are being withheld at this time and an investigation into the cause of the fire is ongoing.
The department says it will release more information as it becomes available.

Wisconsin
No block on Musk’s money: Wisconsin voters weigh in ahead of Supreme Court election

MILWUAKEE — Less than three days before polls open on Election Day, voters across Wisconsin are weighing the impact of Elon Musk’s recent involvement in the state Supreme Court race — and whether his money is motivating or meddling.
Billionaire Elon Musk, a vocal supporter of Judge Brad Schimel, plans to award $1 million each to two individuals at a rally scheduled for Sunday in Green Bay. The payments are intended for those who signed an online petition opposing what he calls “activist judges” and will speak at the rally.
He is also offering $100 to any Wisconsinite who signs the petition.
Chuck Kornowski of West Allis said he and several family members signed Musk’s petition earlier this month.
“My wife and I both filled it out, including my son, my sister, and my brother-in-law,” he said. “It’s awesome.”
Kornowski is now waiting for his $100 check in the mail — part of Musk’s broader campaign offering money to people who sign the online petition. Kornowski said the effort is energizing voters.
“It gets people motivated,” he added. “It is a good idea, I really feel it is.”
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On Saturday, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals denied an emergency request by Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul to block Musk from awarding $1 million each to two voters at the rally Sunday night.
Kaul filed the lawsuit Friday, arguing that Musk’s actions violate Wisconsin election law, which makes it a felony to offer voters anything of value in exchange for voting.
After a county judge declined to hear the case on Saturday, Kaul appealed to the state Court of Appeals, which also rejected his request.
Musk and groups he funds have now poured more than $20 million into the race, which has become the most expensive judicial election in U.S. history. According to WisPolitics, total spending has topped $90 million.
Jerrell Patterson of Milwaukee said he sees the campaign as a creative way to energize new voters.
“Get into the minds of younger people and get them to come to rallies, sign petitions, and become greater Americans — I’m definitely on board with that,” Patterson said.

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Not all voters feel comfortable with the billionaire’s role in the race.
“Getting people out there to vote, certainly,” said Meredith, a Milwaukee voter. “But I don’t know how I feel about a billionaire bribing people to sign petitions and paying his way into an election.”
Musk and former President Donald Trump are supporting conservative candidate Judge Brad Schimel of Waukesha County. Democrats, including George Soros, are backing Dane County Judge Susan Crawford.
“I don’t control what Elon Musk does, and I don’t control what George Soros or J.B. Pritzker do for Susan Crawford,” Schimel said at a rally Friday, pointing to the out-of-state billionaires backing his opponent.
Petition or not, many voters said this election feels more consequential than usual.
“It’s a very high-stakes election,” Meredith added. “Not just for Wisconsin, but for the country as a whole.”

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Control of the Wisconsin Supreme Court hangs in the balance, as a pending retirement means the court’s current 4-3 liberal majority is up for grabs.
Schimel said he would not be attending the Green Bay event with Musk. Attendance is limited to those who signed the petition.
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Wisconsin
Local departments respond to fire at apartment building in Beloit, Wisconsin

BELOIT, Wis. (WIFR) – Flames are seen coming out of multiple windows on the top floor of an apartment building in Beloit.
Around 1:45 p.m. March 29, officials were called to 1926 Cleora Dr. in Beloit, Wisconsin.
Local departments including Harlem-Roscoe and North Park fire were called to assist.
This story is ongoing and will be updated as more information becomes available.
Copyright 2025 WIFR. All rights reserved.
Wisconsin
Elon Musk's group spent over $12 million in Wisconsin. Here's why he cares about a state Supreme Court race.
President Donald Trump may have run his last race, but that doesn’t mean Elon Musk is done campaigning.
Musk will travel to Wisconsin on Sunday, days ahead of a Supreme Court race that could shift the balance of the state’s highest court. True to his word, the world’s richest man is cementing his status as one of the GOP’s biggest megadonors in an off-year election that has drawn significant national attention.
Musk and his America PAC have spent over $12 million so far on the officially nonpartisan state Supreme Court race to help conservative Judge Brad Schimel. Democrats, including former President Barack Obama, have rallied behind liberal Judge Susan Crawford.
More than $80 million has been spent, making the contest the costliest judicial election in US history — supplanting a Wisconsin court from just two years ago.
“Both sides are making a pitch to make it a referendum on Donald Trump or Elon Musk as the case may be,” Marquette Law School professor Chad Oldfather told Business Insider. “It’s kind of the first election of consequence in the Trump era, so I think people are looking for signs here as to how the population is reacting to everything.”
Oldfather, who studies state constitutional law, said Musk’s presence has given this race a different feel.
“We’ve had outside money coming into these races in the past, I suppose what distinguishes it is that Musk is not trying to downplay his role at all,” Oldfather said.
Tesla is suing to open dealerships in the state, fighting a state law that doesn’t allow automakers to sell directly to consumers. (It’s a frequent issue for Musk’s company.) Musk and just about every other major figure who has weighed in on the race is more concerned about what the seven justices can do that will have national effects.
“We’re trying to stop the Democrats in Wisconsin from removing two House seats,” Musk told Fox News anchor Bret Baier during an interview for “Special Report.”
If Schimel loses, Musk said, “we could lose control of the House and all of the government reforms could be shut down.”
The GOP holds a 6 to 2 majority in the Wisconsin US House of Representatives delegation. History shows that the president’s party typically loses seats. The GOP has a slim House majority, meaning it cannot afford to see more districts become more competitive.
Musk isn’t hard to miss in the state.
Crawford and her allies have repeatedly highlighted Musk’s spending in the race. Wisconsin Democrats’ website has a splash page that shows Musk as the puppet master of Schimel.
“Elon Musk is the most unpopular active national figure in Wisconsin politics, and the more voters see that the man who is attacking social security and their healthcare is pouring millions of dollars in to help Brad Schimel, the more voters are enraged about the idea of someone trying to buy our state Supreme Court,” Wisconsin Democrats Chairman Ben Wikler told Business Insider.
After Musk announced his initial giveaway, Crawford’s campaign wrote on X, “Brad Schimel and Elon Musk are corrupt.”
In response to Crawford, Schimel’s campaign said their opponent has plenty of well-heeled supporters herself, including George Soros, Bernie Sanders, and Hakeem Jeffries.
“The attempts by Susan Crawford and the Democrats to distract the people of Wisconsin from her extreme views and the radical billionaires funding her are a mockery of hypocrisy,” Jacob Fischer, Schimel campaign spokesperson, said in a statement to Business Insider.
Wisconsin Republican Party Chairman Brian Schimming called the focus on Musk’s spending “a diversion.”
“It’s a way for them to take shots at Donald Trump and at Elon Musk,” Schimming told Business Insider. “There’s no lack of lack of big money people that have come into Wisconsin over the years that have greatly outspent Elon Musk.”
According to a March 5 Marquette Law School Poll, Musk has a -12 percentage point approval rating in Wisconsin. The same respondents only slightly disapproved (-3 percentage points) of Trump’s first six weeks in office. Trump won the state last November, part of his swing state sweep over Vice President Kamala Harris that ushered him back into the White House. Just days before Election Day, Trump announced his endorsement of Schimel.
Like in the 2024 election, Musk’s campaigning is also drawing opposition. On Friday, he wrote on X that he would personally award two voters $1 million checks at the Sunday rally. He then deleted the tweet and later clarified that the checks were for attendees who had agreed to become spokespeople for a petition America PAC is pushing across the state. Musk’s political outfit previously promised to give $100 to voters who signed the petition against judicial activism.
Wisconsin Attorney General Josh Kaul, a Democrat, said he would challenge Musk’s giveaway in court. Wisconsin law prohibits anyone from giving “something of value” to voters, which led some election law experts to conclude that Musk’s effort was illegal.
The national attention is unlikely to fade for long.
Wisconsin justices serve 10-year terms. Due to retirements alone, the state will hold multiple Supreme Court elections over the next five years. In the meantime, the current race seems almost inescapable, Oldfather said.
“It’s a deluge,” he said, “every time you turn on the TV, every time you pull up YouTube, every you open your mailbox, every time your phone dings with a text message.”
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