Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

High court candidate Screnock gets $30,000 from GOP

- Patrick Marley

MADISON – In the latest sign that Wisconsin’s officially nonpartisa­n race for Supreme Court is actually partisan, one candidate got more than $30,000 in help from the state Republican Party.

Sauk County Circuit Judge Michael Screnock received a $31,152 in-kind donation from the Republican­s on Thursday, according to a filing made over the weekend.

His opponents, both of whom have made appeals to Democrats, criticized Screnock.

“Anyone think it is a coincidenc­e that @wisgop gave my opponent an in-kind for 31k? I don’t. #StopTheFai­ryTale #ChangeSCOW­IS,” Madison attorney Tim Burns wrote in a Twitter message Monday.

Burns — who calls himself a Democrat in his television ad — has said on the campaign trail that it is a “fairy tale” that candidates running for the state’s high court don’t have or can overlook their political leanings.

“From Act 10 to gerrymande­ring, Screnock spent his short legal career doing the bidding of (Gov.) Scott Walker and the Republican Party. He is intentiona­lly misleading voters when he says he is nonpartisa­n,” said a statement from Jessica Lovejoy, the campaign manager of Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Rebecca Dallet.

Her statement referred to work Screnock performed as an attorney assisting Republican lawmakers draw legislativ­e districts that helped their party and defending Act 10 — the 2011 law that limited collective bargaining for public workers — in court.

Both Dallet and Burns spoke at the state Democratic convention last year, and Dallet recently debuted a TV ad critical of GOP President Donald Trump.

Screnock campaign adviser Sean Lansing defended the GOP help Screnock is getting, saying in a statement that Screnock “welcomes donations from anyone who believes in the importance of a fair and impartial judiciary that relies on the rule of law, our Constituti­on and the separation of powers.”

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