Wisconsin
Wisconsin Democrats gather for state convention following fatal shooting of Minnesota lawmaker
Wisconsin Democrats gathered for their annual state convention in the Wisconsin Dells on a tumultuous Saturday that saw millions protest President Donald Trump, a military parade in the nation’s capitol and the fatal shooting of a Democratic state lawmaker in neighboring Minnesota.
On the first night of the Wisconsin Democratic Party’s convention, speakers mourned what they painted as a political assassination across the border amid a noticeable police presence outside the gathering.
Former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband were killed in their home early Saturday. Minnesota Democratic Sen. John Hoffman and his wife were injured at their home about about 9 miles away.
A source involved with planning Wisconsin’s Democratic convention told WPR the state party “already had a robust security plan in place,” but took “additional cautionary measures in light of the horrific events that unfolded in Minnesota earlier today.”
The hallways and conference rooms of the Chula Vista Resort were warm as Democratic activists met and trained on how to counter the Trump administration. They also talked about maintaining momentum in a state where Democrats chipped away at Republican control of the state Legislature and cemented a liberal majority on the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
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Outgoing state Democratic Party Chair Ben Wikler opened the convention on a somber note, calling the politically motivated murders of fellow Democrats in Minnesota a moment of “shock and grief.” He then called on attendees currently serving or running for elected office to stand if they felt comfortable doing so. As they did, the room erupted with cheers and applause.
“We’re here to support you, and we honor your service to all of us,” Wikler said. “You should not have to fear for your life to serve in public office in this country or anywhere.”
U.S. Rep. Gwen Moore, D-Milwaukee, urged the audience to take a “deep breath and remember our brothers and sisters in Minnesota.”
“I’ve checked in with all of our counterparts in Minnesota in Congress, and they’re doing well,” Moore said. “But you know what? Y’all, this will not prevail. We’re gonna win!”
During a two-way conversation on stage with Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin, Wikler asked the senator to address the Minnesota tragedy.
In her answer, Baldwin referenced an incident Thursday where officers pinned California U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla to the ground and handcuffed him after he tried to criticize the Trump administration’s immigration raids during a news conference by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.
“What we’re seeing,” Baldwin said. “What we saw with my colleague, Alex Padilla, is an effort to silence, and we will not be silenced.”

Wisconsin Democrats celebrate recent victories, look toward ‘trifecta’ in 2026
Throughout the evening’s speeches, Wisconsin Democrats spent as much time touting their recent victories as they did condemning Trump’s administration and Republican lawmakers who support him.
After taking the stage to a standing ovation, Gov. Tony Evers lauded his fellow Democrats for being “really good at getting things done.” He touted expansions of broadband access in Wisconsin, said Democrats are “fixing the damn roads” and claimed people switched from calling him “two or three term Tony.”
“And now, they just call me 400-year Tony,” Evers said, referencing a school funding veto he made in 2023. “Because I used my constitutional veto power to provide a $325 increase per-student every year for the next four centuries!”
Evers, like several other Democrats who spoke, celebrated the resounding victory of Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice-elect Susan Crawford over conservative Judge Brad Schimel. He painted Crawford’s 10 percentage point win as Democrats “taking on the richest man on the planet,” Elon Musk, who spent heavily on Wisconsin’s race.
“And guess what?” Evers said. “We’re undefeated, Wisconsin. Dems, one. Elon Musk, zip.”
Multiple speakers at the convention talked about a building “blue wave” in November 2026. They said they could see Democrats keep the governor’s office and flip both chambers of the Wisconsin Legislature, resulting in what’s known as a “trifecta.”
Wisconsin Senate Minority Leader Dianne Hesselbein, D-Middleton, said future Democratic majorities would fund education and health care while repealing Act 10, former Gov. Scott Walker’s landmark law that restricts collective bargaining rights for most public sector union workers.
“We will also legalize cannabis,” Hesselbein said as the convention hall erupted in cheers.
The convention was set to resume Sunday with the election of a new party chair to replace Wikler, who announced earlier this year he would not seek another term.
Wisconsin Public Radio, © Copyright 2025, Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System and Wisconsin Educational Communications Board.
Wisconsin
Has Wisconsin Supreme Court candidate Chris Taylor been ‘pushing noncitizen voting’?
Wisconsin
President of Wisconsin’s largest mosque detained by US immigration agents
The president of Wisconsin’s largest mosque was detained by federal immigration agents, drawing accusations from local officials and religious leaders that the arrest was motivated by his statements against Israel.
Salah Sarsour, a Palestinian-born legal permanent resident of the United States, was taken into custody by nearly a dozen US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents on Monday in Milwaukee after he left his home, according to the Islamic Society of Milwaukee.
Supporters called for his immediate release on Thursday and his attorneys said he was detained on the grounds that he is a foreign policy threat. His attorneys say the claims have no merit.
Instead, they believe Sarsour, 53, was targeted for speaking out against Israel and for a conviction as a minor by Israeli military courts, which have faced scrutiny over allegations of limited due process and high conviction rates of Palestinians. Israel rejects those claims. The offenses included allegedly throwing rocks at Israeli officers, according to attorney Munjed Ahmad.
“Our government should not be doing the bidding of a foreign government,” Ahmad said of Israel. “There’s no question in my mind is that this is to stifle the discourse on the Palestinian narrative.”
Attorneys said Sarsour, born in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, has no criminal record in the US.
Sarsour’s attorneys have likened the case to that of Mahmoud Khalil, a former Columbia University activist who faces deportation because the federal government said he was a foreign policy threat.
An email message left on Thursday for ICE and the Department of Homeland Security was not immediately returned.
Sarsour has been the president of the Islamic Society of Milwaukee, the largest Islamic organization in the state, for five years. His attorneys say he’s held a green card for years and lived in the Milwaukee area. His wife and four adult children are US citizens.
His arrest prompted outcry from top elected officials, including Milwaukee’s mayor, Cavalier Johnson, who called it “an outrage”.
“He is a legal permanent resident. There is no substantive evidence he has done anything wrong,” Johnson said in a post on X. “This is another example of overreach and harm from the U.S. Immigration authorities.”
Sarsour is being held at county jail outside Indianapolis. His attorneys have filed a petition seeking his release.
“He is ready to fight tooth and nail to make sure that he’s not drug through the mud,” Ahmad said. “He wants to stay in this country.”
Wisconsin
Wisconsin police can now test saliva if they suspect drugged driving
Westmoreland describes new state law targeting reckless drivers
Milwaukee Alderman Lamont Westmoreland, flanked by Common Council colleagues and Milwaukee Police Department Assistant Chief Craig Sarnow, discusses a pending state law that will allow police to crack down on reckless drivers.
A new state law allows police who suspect drugged driving to perform a rapid roadside test of the driver’s saliva to check for THC, opioids, meth and more, though police departments don’t appear ready to roll it out immediately.
State law already allows police to use breathalyzers to check blood-alcohol levels, but those devices don’t test for other intoxicating substances. The new law allows police to sample oral fluids – mainly saliva – when they suspect an OWI.
Law enforcement groups that advocated for the law change say drug impairment is more difficult to identify than alcohol intoxication. Plus, intoxication levels can decrease between the time police make a traffic stop and a blood sample is collected.
“Oral fluid screening would give officers an additional, objective tool to confirm the presence of drugs – much like a preliminary breath test does for alcohol – before making an arrest decision,” Dane County Sheriff Kalvin Barrett said at a December public hearing.
Wisconsin Act 99 became effective March 15, two days after Democratic Gov. Tony Evers signed it into law. The state Legislature passed it in February with bipartisan support.
Here’s what to know about the new law:
What does the law allow police to do when they suspect an impaired driver?
If police have probable cause to believe a driver is intoxicated, the officer can request a saliva or breath test, or both. That’s in addition to field sobriety tests.
The officer places a mouth swab inside the driver’s cheek or under the tongue and runs it through a handheld device, such as Abbott’s SoToxa or Alere DDS2.
The legislation was amended to allow the tests for suspected intoxicated operation of vehicles other than cars, such as boats, snowmobiles, ATVs, UTVs and more.
Are the oral drug tests admissible in court?
No. The test results aren’t admissible in court and must be destroyed or returned to the person after the test is completed.
The preliminary tests are used only to help police decide whether to make an arrest and pursue laboratory confirmation testing.
Have police in Wisconsin tried saliva drug tests before?
Yes. The Dane County and Manitowoc County sheriff’s offices piloted the program in 2016 and 2019, finding that oral fluid testing devices were accurate and consistent with blood tests.
Dane County conducted its study with the State Laboratory of Hygiene and published the results in an academic journal. The study found that 64% of participants arrested for an OWI also had one or more drugs in their blood, with THC the most common.
Manitowoc County worked with the State Laboratory of Hygiene and the Wisconsin State Patrol on its study, which collected 100 voluntary samples. Results showed 41% of OWI offenders were positive for THC, 20% for amphetamine and 14% for methamphetamine.
Which police agencies plan to use the new saliva drug test?
Wisconsin Chiefs of Police Association President Danny Thompson said he wasn’t aware of any agencies immediately using the test.
“Although this roadside test will be very beneficial to arresting dangerous, impaired drivers, we have not heard of any agencies ready to implement this kind of testing right away,” Thompson said in a statement to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
A Milwaukee Police Department spokesperson said the department isn’t using the tests “at this time and are still looking into it.” A Milwaukee County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson didn’t respond to a request for comment.
The two departments that piloted the program also don’t plan to bring it back right away.
Manitowoc County Sheriff Daniel Hartwig said his office is monitoring guidance related to the new law but doesn’t have plans to implement it at this point. A Dane County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson said the county would use it “given the appropriate funding and resources.”
How much would the program cost?
Each SoToxa device appears to cost around $4,500 to $5,000, according to news reports on programs in North Dakota and San Diego.
Law enforcement groups said agencies in Wisconsin would likely pursue funding for the devices through federal grants.
Do other states use saliva screening?
Yes. A state-by-state analysis from the National Alliance to Stop Impaired Driving shows 10 states have statewide roadside oral fluid testing programs, and another eight have the program in some jurisdictions.
A 2021 report from the National Conference of State Legislatures found nearly half of states have the law, but few used it. One that does is Indiana, where over 200 handheld test devices are used across 110 law enforcement agencies.
Who authored and supported the law?
The bill was authored by Republicans, including Sen. Jesse James from Thorp and Rep. Barbara Dittrich from Oconomowoc. Several Democrats became cosponsors, including Rep. Lori Palmeri from Oshkosh and Rep. Ryan Spaude from Ashwaubenon.
Supporters of the bill included AAA Wisconsin, the Milwaukee Police Association, the Wisconsin Chiefs of Police Association and Mothers Against Drunk Driving. No groups registered in opposition to the bill.
What qualifies as operating while intoxicated in Wisconsin?
According to the Wisconsin Department of Transportation and state law, a driver is considered to be operating while intoxicated if:
- The driver is under the influence of an intoxicant, controlled substance or other drug that impairs their ability to safely operate a vehicle, even if the vehicle isn’t in motion at the time of the traffic stop.
- The driver has a detectable amount of a restricted controlled substance in their blood. That includes cocaine, heroin, meth, delta-9 THC (if at a concentration of one or more nanograms per milliliter in a person’s blood) and more.
- The driver has a BAC over what the law allows, such as above 0.08 for first-time offenders, 0.04 for commercial drivers or 0.02 for drivers with three or more prior OWIs.
Hope Karnopp can be reached at HKarnopp@usatodayco.com.
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