Connect with us

News

Who Won and Who Lost in Primary Elections in Wisconsin and Elsewhere

Published

on

Who Won and Who Lost in Primary Elections in Wisconsin and Elsewhere

4 states held main elections on Tuesday — and we received a concession in one among final week’s Home races in Washington State. Right here’s a rundown of a few of the most necessary wins and losses.

  • Republicans selected Tim Michels, a development govt endorsed by former President Donald J. Trump, to problem Gov. Tony Evers this fall. Mr. Michels defeated former Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch and Tim Ramthun, a state assemblyman who campaigned on decertifying the 2020 election, which is legally unimaginable.

  • Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes gained the Democratic main for Senate and can face Senator Ron Johnson in November. Mr. Barnes’s nomination was basically a foregone conclusion after his foremost rivals withdrew.

  • Robin Vos, the highly effective speaker of the Wisconsin Meeting, narrowly defeated Adam Steen, a Trump-endorsed main challenger. Mr. Steen — who had referred to as for eliminating absentee and early voting choices within the state and for decertifying the 2020 election — almost gained regardless of barely working any paid promoting, displaying the persevering with energy of Mr. Trump.

  • State Assemblywoman Amy Loudenbeck gained the Republican nomination for secretary of state, an workplace that isn’t answerable for overseeing elections in Wisconsin, although some Republicans within the state wish to change that. She’s going to face the Democratic incumbent, Doug La Follette, who was first elected to the place in 1974.

  • After per week of vote-counting, Consultant Jaime Herrera Beutler — one of many 10 Home Republicans who voted to question Mr. Trump — conceded in Washington’s Third Congressional District. Candidates within the state run on a single main poll no matter social gathering, and the highest two advance to the overall election; the Democrat Marie Gluesenkamp Perez will advance, and Joe Kent, a Trump endorsee, was in second, however The Related Press had not referred to as the race as of early Wednesday.

  • Consultant Ilhan Omar narrowly survived a problem from Don Samuels, a reasonable Democrat who ran on a pro-police platform. She gained by two share factors, a startlingly shut final result after she had defeated her final main challenger by 20 factors.

  • Within the First Congressional District, the previous state lawmaker Brad Finstad gained the Republican main and the businessman Jeff Ettinger gained the Democratic main. Each males have been on the poll a second time, in a particular normal election for a similar seat. The Related Press had not referred to as that race as of early Wednesday.

  • Becca Balint, a progressive chief within the Vermont Legislature, defeated Lt. Gov. Molly Grey in a Democratic main for Vermont’s sole Home seat. The race was seen as a battle between the social gathering’s progressive and reasonable wings. If elected in November, which is predicted given Vermont’s Democratic leanings, she can be the state’s first feminine member of Congress. Liam Madden, an antiwar activist who served in Iraq, gained the Republican main.

  • Consultant Peter Welch — the present occupant of the Home seat Ms. Balint is searching for — gained his main for the Democratic nomination to interchange Senator Patrick J. Leahy, who’s retiring after almost 50 years.

  • Vermont’s Republican governor, Phil Scott, was renominated and can face the Democratic nominee, Brenda Siegel, in November.

  • Leora Levy, who was endorsed by Mr. Trump, gained the Republican main to problem Senator Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat who isn’t thought-about susceptible in November. Ms. Levy defeated Themis Klarides, a reasonable candidate who helps abortion rights.

  • Democrats nominated Stephanie Thomas, a state consultant, for secretary of state. Republicans nominated Dominic Rapini, the previous chairman of a bunch that has promoted claims of voter fraud.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

News

Video: Who Loses in the Republican Policy Bill?

Published

on

Video: Who Loses in the Republican Policy Bill?

Congressional Republicans just passed President Trump’s sprawling domestic policy bill that extends and expands tax cuts and spending on defense and deportations, while slashing Medicaid, food benefits and clean energy initiatives. Margot Sanger-Katz, a health care policy reporter for The New York Times, gives an overview.

Continue Reading

News

Client Challenge

Published

on

Client Challenge


Client Challenge



JavaScript is disabled in your browser.

Please enable JavaScript to proceed.

Advertisement

A required part of this site couldn’t load. This may be due to a browser
extension, network issues, or browser settings. Please check your
connection, disable any ad blockers, or try using a different browser.

Continue Reading

News

Pope Leo's scandal-plagued hometown sees a bright future in buying his childhood home

Published

on

Pope Leo's scandal-plagued hometown sees a bright future in buying his childhood home

Pope Leo’s childhood home in Dolton, Ill., is up for auction later this month.

Raymond Boyd/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Advertisement

Raymond Boyd/Getty Images

The Chicago suburb where Pope Leo grew up plans to purchase his childhood home and turn it into a historic site.

The Board of Trustees of Dolton, Ill., voted unanimously on Tuesday to put an offer on the three-bedroom, three-bath brick house, which is up for auction later this month.

At the meeting — which was livestreamed online — Mayor Jason House called the purchase a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity” for the village, which in recent years has been plagued by a series of scandals over alleged financial and political misconduct by its previous mayor.

Advertisement

“We can either seize this moment and move it forward, or we can let that moment go to an investor,” House said.

The May election of Pope Leo — the first American-born pope — has drawn national attention to Dolton, a village with an estimated population around 20,000 some 20 miles south of Chicago.

Leo — then known as Robert Prevost — grew up in the home on East 141st Place. His parents bought it new in 1949, paying a $42 monthly mortgage, according to member station WBEZ.

Prevost moved away for college and spent most of his career in Peru before rising through the Vatican ranks. His family sold the house in 1996, and ownership changed multiple times in the years since. Most recently, a local bought it as a flip property in 2024 and had been trying to sell it earlier this year — as the Roman Catholic Church was undergoing a seismic change in leadership.

According to WBEZ, the house was listed for $219,000 on May 5, just days after Pope Francis’ death and before the start of the papal conclave. But the listing was taken down by the time Leo emerged as the new pontiff.

Advertisement

Broker iCandy Realty and real estate auction firm Paramount Realty are offering it to the highest bidder by July 17, with a reserve price of $250,000 — the minimum the seller will accept. They say it was renovated in 2025, but remains a part of history.

“Pope Leo XIV’s journey from this humble neighborhood to the Vatican is a testament to faith, perseverance, and purpose,” its informational brochure reads. “Now, you have the rare chance to own a tangible piece of his inspiring legacy.”

Neither village authorities, the realtor or the auction firm involved have responded to NPR’s requests for comment about what Tuesday’s vote might mean for the property’s sale and future.

Some locals don’t see the house as a top priority

While the unanimous motion drew a smattering of applause in the room, not everyone is thrilled about this use of village funds.

Dolton has been plagued by financial and political scandals since well before the new pope put it on the map.

Advertisement

Its previous mayor, Tiffany Henyard, is the subject of multiple lawsuits and a federal investigation over alleged corruption, financial mismanagement and political retaliation during her four-year tenure.

Residents voted to recall her in 2022, but an appeals court later ruled that election invalid. In 2024, the Board of Trustees hired former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot to investigate Henyard’s conduct.

Lightfoot shared the results in January, outlining a pattern of unchecked spending and deception by Henyard. One of her findings was that Dolton’s general fund balance had dropped from a surplus in 2022 to around $3.65 million in debt.

Henyard’s attorney accused Lightfoot of “political theater” in an effort to thwart her re-election campaign, which was unsuccessful. House beat her in the Democratic primary with 88% of the vote and was sworn in in May. And while Henyard’s legal troubles continue, House has pledged to get the village back on track.

Advertisement

His priorities include rebuilding trust between the local government and residents, as well as bringing new businesses to the area.

It’s against this backdrop that several concerned citizens came forward on Tuesday to question the house purchase, saying they would rather see an investment in basic infrastructure improvements, like fixing roads and filling potholes.

“We need to be mindful of addressing the issues that the city has while we’re trying to address the debts and the lawsuits,” the Rev. Ryan Reese said from the crowd. “I’m not sure that this is the first priority.”

Another resident, Mary Avent, said that while buying the house is “admirable,” she worries about whether the village can afford it.

“Even if we have the money, who’s going to maintain that?” she asked.

Advertisement

House said police and public works have been maintaining the property and will continue to do so.

“We’ve had charters come in here, we want to make sure that anybody that comes into our community is safe,” he said. “That’s a cost we will incur whether we own the property or not … Why would we not want to participate in that and get the benefit of this historic moment moving forward?”

House assured worried residents that the project will not derail from the board’s other priorities, adding that some roads would be repaved within days.

Officials hope history can fund the future 

House said he wants the community to benefit from its history, and spoke of opportunities to get state and federal funds to do so. He stressed that attracting visitors would create much-needed revenue for the village, saying “you cannot cut your way out of a deficit.”

Several board members compared the pope’s house to the childhood homes of figures like Martin Luther King Jr. and Michael Jackson, and the tourism opportunities it could create. The Jackson home in Gary, Ind., is unoccupied and owned by the family, while the King family sold two of MLK’s Atlanta homes — where he was born, and where he later lived with his family — to the National Park Service within the last decade.

Advertisement

“When we do it the correct way, in the long run, it will pay for itself,” trustee Tammie Brown said, adding that she’s already heard from supporters of the idea who want to donate.

Since May, camera crews and Catholic tourists have traveled from across the country to visit and take pictures outside of the two-story house (although some mistakenly flocked to the wrong one), according to local media reports.

On Tuesday, the Village of Dolton posted photos to its Facebook page of workers repairing the building’s roof. It said the house continues to attract visitors, “bringing new energy and attention to our village.”

“This increased traffic represents a new day in Dolton — full of potential, progress, and promise,” it said.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending