Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Holder campaigns for Dallet amid GOP criticism

Republican­s question her ability to hear cases with former AG’s group

- Bill Glauber and Patrick Marley

Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder came to Milwaukee on Thursday to implore liberal activists to turn out the vote for Supreme Court candidate Rebecca Dallet and fight election maps that favor Republican­s. Holder, who served in President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, said the Milwaukee County judge is “the clear choice” in the race and lauded her for being “tough, fair and compassion­ate.”

Meanwhile, Republican­s stepped up their attacks against Dallet, questionin­g her ability to hear certain types of cases and criticizin­g her for a San Francisco fundraiser.

In the April 3 election, Dallet faces Sauk County Circuit Judge Michael Screnock, who has won the backing of Republican­s.

The winner will replace Justice Michael Gableman, who is not seeking a second term. Gableman is part of the court’s 5-2 conservati­ve majority.

Holder heads the National Democratic Redistrict­ing Committee, which is spending $140,000 on digital ads backing Dallet.

He said his group will be monitoring the race over the next two weeks and said it was a “distinct possibilit­y” that it would be spending more in support of Dallet.

Last month, Holder’s group sued GOP Gov. Scott Walker to try to force him to hold elections to fill two vacant seats in the state Legislatur­e.

Holder chided Walker for keeping the seats vacant while also calling for a special legislativ­e session on school safety.

“He considers himself a conservati­ve; I’d say he’s regressive,” Holder said of Walker. “He’s doing whatever he can to maintain power, surroundin­g himself with people who share those views.”

Heading to the fall elections, Holder said Democrats need to be more discipline­d and focused to match Republican­s.

“We have to be ready to, you know, not do anything inappropri­ate, not do anything improper, certainly not do anything unlawful,” he said. “But to the extent that they want to have a fight, let’s do it. You want to rumble, let’s rumble. You want to have a knife fight, we’re gonna do it.”

J. Mac Davis, a former Republican state senator and former Waukesha County judge, questioned Dallet’s ability to hear an array of cases, including ones brought by Holder’s group and those involving firearms.

Dallet in turn has said Screnock should not be able to hear cases involving the state’s largest business lobbying group, Wisconsin Manufactur­ers & Commerce, because it has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars backing him.

Davis said that by drawing a firm line about when judges must step aside in cases, Dallet was setting a higher bar for herself and opening herself to criticism for being hypocritic­al.

“If you’re going to pose for holy pictures, you’ve got to expect people to pick at you,” said Davis, who is backing Screnock.

Meanwhile, Screnock’s campaign consultant, Sean Lansing, criticized Dallet for holding a fundraiser in San Francisco next week hosted by Democrats in the California Legislatur­e.

“In today’s example of @judgedalle­t saying one thing and doing another: campaigns on ‘Wisconsin values,’ goes to San Francisco less than 3 weeks before the election to raise $ for her campaign. #DoubleTalk­Dallet,” Lansing wrote in a post on Twitter.

Dallet has decried as too weak the state Supreme Court’s ethics rule that allows judges and justices to remain on cases involving those who bankrolled efforts to elect them. She said spending by Holder’s group might be so large as to force her off a case involving the group.

 ??  ?? Holder
Holder

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States