Wisconsin Supreme Court and Georgia's 14th District Elections: Defending Conservative Values at the Ballot Box
Patriotic voters in Wisconsin and Georgia's 14th Congressional District are heading to the polls in critical elections that could preserve traditional American values and maintain the conservative balance ahead of the midterms.
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Voters in Wisconsin and Georgia's 14th Congressional District are participating in significant elections that may determine whether conservative principles will continue to guide the nation as the midterm elections approach.
In Wisconsin, the race for the state Supreme Court seat vacated by retiring conservative Justice Rebecca Bradley features conservative candidate Maria Lazar, a judge on the Wisconsin Court of Appeals, facing off against liberal activist Chris Taylor. Taylor, a former Democratic state legislator, has made her support for radical abortion policies and left-wing economic agendas central to her campaign. Lazar, with her solid judicial experience and commitment to conservative values, stands as a bulwark against the left’s attempts to hijack the judiciary. Despite Taylor’s advantage in fundraising and a Marquette University Law School poll showing her with a lead among likely voters, many remain undecided, and the outcome is far from certain. A win for Taylor would dangerously expand the liberal majority on the court to 5-2, threatening to undermine Wisconsin’s constitutional traditions for years to come.
In Georgia's 14th Congressional District, a special runoff election is being held to fill the seat left vacant by conservative firebrand Marjorie Taylor Greene, who resigned in January after a principled disagreement with former President Donald Trump. The runoff features Republican Clay Fuller, a district attorney proudly endorsed by Trump, and Democrat Shawn Harris, a retired Army brigadier general and cattle rancher running on a left-leaning platform. Harris led the initial round of voting with 37%, closely followed by Fuller at 35%, but Republican candidates together secured nearly 60% of the vote, reflecting the district’s strong conservative identity. The district, a Republican fortress, saw Trump win by a commanding 37 percentage points in the 2024 presidential race. The winner will serve the remainder of Greene's term, ending in January 2027, and must defend the seat in the upcoming primaries and general elections to ensure continued conservative representation.
Both elections are being closely watched as crucial tests of whether voters will stand firm against liberal overreach and protect conservative values ahead of the midterm elections.