The Sentinel-Record

Trump ally takes on Walker protégé in race for Wisconsin governor’s seat

- SCOTT BAUER The Associated Press

MADISON, Wis. — Republican hopes to reclaim a crucial governor’s seat in swing-state Wisconsin this year long appeared to rest on Rebecca Kleefisch, a former TV news anchor who spent eight years as former Gov. Scott Walker’s heir apparent and vowed to continue his sharply conservati­ve policies. Then a wealthy constructi­on company owner jumped in, dumped $12 million of his own money into the race and won Donald Trump’s backing.

Now Tim Michels is in a competitiv­e race against Kleefisch heading into Tuesday’s primary to decide who will face Democratic Gov. Tony Evers in November.

The contest is part of a deepening proxy fight between Trump and his estranged former vice president, Mike Pence, who has thrown his support to Kleefisch. And it could ultimately have implicatio­ns for 2024, when Trump has dangled the possibilit­y of another White House bid and has shown his willingnes­s to pressure elected officials, including those in Wisconsin, to overturn election results.

Michels has focused on shaping an outsider candidacy — bolstered by the Trump endorsemen­t — while Kleefisch has embraced her establishm­ent support as evidence that she’s a more reliable GOP choice.

Trump appeared with Michels at a Friday night rally in Waukesha, the heart of Milwaukee’s conservati­ve suburbs. Trump called Kleefisch “a career politician and a political insider. I’ve known her for a long time. She’s the handpicked candidate of the failed establishm­ent, the RINOS.” That’s a derogatory term standing for “Republican in name only.”

“Rebecca Kleefisch does not have what it takes to beat Tony Evers,” Trump said. “He’s going to win if he runs against Rebecca.”

Michels appeared on stage with Trump, but did not call for overturnin­g the 2020 election.

Kleefisch and Michels have both questioned President Joe Biden’s victory over Trump in Wisconsin in 2020 — an outcome that has withstood recounts, lawsuits and reviews — but neither has taken up Trump’s pressure campaign to have those results decertifie­d.

Kleefisch has called the 2020 election “rigged” but said she won’t consider decertific­ation because “it’s not constituti­onally possible.” Michels initially called decertifyi­ng Biden’s 2020 win in Wisconsin “not a priority” and then later said “everything will be on the table.”

Both Michels and Kleefisch want to do away with the current bipartisan commission that runs elections in the state.

A third Republican candidate for governor, state Rep. Tim Ramthun, has repeatedly called for decertific­ation and made it the centerpiec­e of his longshot campaign.

Biden’s win in Wisconsin has withstood two partial recounts, numerous lawsuits, a nonpartisa­n audit and a review by a conservati­ve law firm. Republican legislativ­e leaders have repeatedly said decertific­ation is impossible.

Kleefisch has racked up support not only from Pence, but also her former boss Walker, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, GOP leaders of the Legislatur­e, 56 lawmakers, the state chamber of commerce, the Tavern League and a majority of the state’s county sheriffs.

“I am the one who is tested and proven and ready to go,” Kleefisch said after Pence touted her at a stop in suburban Milwaukee on Wednesday. “I am the one who has won statewide four times.”

Michels claims that he is “not a politician,” but he’s been a power player largely behind the scenes for decades and previously ran for U.S. Senate in 2004, losing to then-sen. Russ Feingold. He’s been a regular donor to Republican­s, including both Walker and Kleefisch.

“People want an outsider, people want a veteran, people want a businessma­n,” Michels said in a candidate debate.

Wisconsin is the third state where Pence and Trump have been on opposite sides in governor’s races that highlighte­d deep divisions about the GOP’S future. In Georgia, Pence-backed Gov. Brian Kemp thumped Trump’s choice, former Sen. David Perdue, by more than 50 percentage points. In Arizona’s governor primary, Trump-backed former TV news anchor Kari Lake and Pence-backed businesswo­man Karrin Taylor Robson were in a race that was too early to call on Thursday.

The territory that drew Pence and Kleefisch on Wednesday is the heart of Republican Wisconsin and home to the key suburban Milwaukee voters who will likely decide the fall election. It’s also Kleefisch’s home turf. Trump, whose support in the area declined from 2016 to 2020, held his Friday rally for Michels just three miles from where Pence came for Kleefisch.

“There is no candidate for governor in America who is more capable, more experience­d, or a more proven conservati­ve than Rebecca Kleefisch,” Pence said in touting Kleefisch without mentioning Trump or Michels.

Kleefisch is a former Milwaukee television news anchor and teenage beauty pageant contestant who got into politics in 2010 and won a five-way primary for lieutenant governor. After Evers beat Walker in 2018, Kleefisch started laying the groundwork for her own run.

She has reminded Republican­s about the fights she went through with Walker, when his proposal effectivel­y ending collective bargaining led to massive protests in 2011 and eventually a failed attempt to recall both him and Kleefisch from office. This cycle, she has focused on issues like institutin­g a flat income tax, expanding school choice programs and investing more in law enforcemen­t.

Michels co-owns the state’s largest constructi­on company, Michels Corp., along with his brothers, and has spent nearly $1 million a week of his own money since getting into the race. Though he uses the Trump endorsemen­t as evidence of his outsider status, he’s also backed by Wisconsin’s ultimate Republican political insider — four-term former Gov. Tommy Thompson, who briefly flirted with his own run.

Michels has stumbled at times.

He flip-flopped this week when asked whether he would back a Trump run in 2024, first refusing to say, then 24 hours later saying he would back Trump for president. At an earlier debate, he didn’t appear to know what DACA — Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, a highly contentiou­s immigratio­n program — stood for. And he’s faced criticism for purchasing $30 million in properties in New York and Connecticu­t between 2015 and 2020 and splitting time between Wisconsin and the East Coast, where his children attended and graduated from high school.

Michels’ positions on the boards of various transporta­tion-related industry groups have caused him some heartburn, with Kleefisch seeking to tie him to those groups’ past support for raising the state gas tax. Michels says he opposes an

increase.

He is also running ads taking a strong anti-immigrant position, even though he headed the board of directors of a transporta­tion group that opposed an anti-immigrant bill that would have prevented companies that employ “illegal aliens” from getting state contracts.

While the Republican­s battle, Evers has raised more than $11 million this year and is casting himself as the only block against Republican­s who want to overhaul elections for the 2024 presidenti­al campaign and keep in place an 1849 state law banning abortions. Both Kleefisch and Michels support the ban and the law, which is being challenged in court by Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul.

“I have a good record,” Evers said, highlighti­ng the state’s 2.8% unemployme­nt rate, increased funding for public schools, expanded rural broadband access, emphasis on repairing roads and a 15% cut in income taxes. “Let them bring it on.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? ■ From left, Rebecca Kleefisch, Tim Michels and Timothy Ramthun participat­e in a televised Wisconsin Republican gubernator­ial debate on July 24 in Milwaukee. The winner of Tuesday’s primary will advance to face Democratic Gov. Tony Evers in November.
The Associated Press ■ From left, Rebecca Kleefisch, Tim Michels and Timothy Ramthun participat­e in a televised Wisconsin Republican gubernator­ial debate on July 24 in Milwaukee. The winner of Tuesday’s primary will advance to face Democratic Gov. Tony Evers in November.

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