Just because I'm in a news mood today, there's been some interesting activity in Wisconsin lately. The very first post-union-dustup election was held last night, for a State Supreme Court seat. The incumbent, David Prosser, had held the seat for 30 years, and had rarely if ever actually had to campaign for it. The challenger, JoAnne Kloppenburg, had already run for another Supreme Court seat a few months ago, and was blown away 65-35 in an election a couple thousand people turned out for.
At any other time, in any other state, that exact same thing would have been repeated. But Kloppenburg became the vessel for a lot of anti-Walker funding and campaigning and promises to oppose any Walker-related labor legislation that came before the court, while Prosser quietly acknowledged his support for the governor's ongoing campaign. Voter turnout was something like 33%, phenomenal for an off-season state election between two candidates nobody had ever heard of a month ago. With 1.2 million votes counted,
Kloppenburg declared victory when the State Department's first official final vote count said she came out 204 votes ahead.
Naturally, it's in recount, and probably will be a few times, but if she winds up winning by a single vote, with be an extraordinary event in the continuum of state politics. It will also shift the balance of the Wisconsin Supreme Court from a one-seat margin in the governor's favor to a one-vote margin against, at a time when there's some huge pieces of legislation likely to be ruled on.