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Once common, now unusual: Conservative candidate publicly quashes shouts that the other side cheated

Wisconsin Supreme Court
April 02, 2025

PEWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) โ€” As the first news outlets began calling the Wisconsin Supreme Court election for the liberal candidate Susan Crawford, her opponent called her โ€” to concede.

Minutes later Tuesday night, the conservative-backed Brad Schimel took the stage at his watch party to acknowledge the loss. Angry yells broke out. One woman began to chant about his opponent: โ€œCheater.โ€

Schimel didn't hesitate. โ€œNo,โ€ he responded. โ€œYouโ€™ve got to accept the results.โ€ Later, he returned to the stage with his classic rock cover band to jam on his bass.

Once common, now unusual: Conservative candidate publicly quashes shouts that the other side cheated
Wisconsin Supreme Court

In any other American era, Schimelโ€™s concession wouldnโ€™t be considered unusual โ€“ except maybe the guitar part. But it stands out at a time when the nation's politics have opened a fissure between those who trust election results and those who donโ€™t.

โ€œIt shouldnโ€™t be super laudable,โ€ said Jeff Mandell, general counsel of the Madison-based liberal law firm Law Forward. โ€œBut given where we are and given what weโ€™ve seen over the past few years nationwide and in Wisconsin, it is laudable.โ€

Accusations of cheating are common now

Over the past several years, numerous Republicans โ€” and some Democrats โ€” have lobbed unfounded accusations of voter fraud, harassed election officials and pointed to โ€œirregularitiesโ€ to dispute their election losses. President Donald Trump led that movement in 2020, when he filed lawsuits in battleground states, including one thrown out by the Wisconsin Supreme Court, seeking to overturn his loss to Democrat Joe Biden.

Schimelโ€™s concession of that very same court to a liberal majority, though in line with what generations of candidates have done in the past, was not a given in todayโ€™s divisive atmosphere.

Once common, now unusual: Conservative candidate publicly quashes shouts that the other side cheated
APTOPIX Wisconsin Supreme Court

Onstage, as his supporters yelled, Schimel shook his head and left no uncertainty heโ€™d lost โ€” a result that would become even clearer later in the night as Crawfordโ€™s lead grew to around 10 percentage points.

โ€œThe numbers arenโ€™t going to โ€” arenโ€™t going to turn around,โ€ he told the crowd. โ€œTheyโ€™re too bad, and weโ€™re not going to pull this off.โ€

By acknowledging his loss quickly, Schimel curtailed the kind of explanation-seeking and digital digging that erupted online after Trump, a Republican, lost the 2020 presidential election, with citizen journalists falsely accusing innocent election workers and voters of fraud.

Schimel also avoided the impulses to which many in his party have defaulted in recent elections across the country, as they've dragged their feet to avoid accepting defeat.

Last fall, Wisconsin Republican Eric Hovde spent days sowing doubt in the results after he lost a Senate race to Democrat Tammy Baldwin. He conceded nearly two weeks after Election Day, saying he did not want to โ€œadd to political strife through a contentious recountโ€ even as he raised debunked election conspiracies.

In a 2024 state Supreme Court race in North Carolina, two recounts have affirmed Democrat Allison Riggs narrowly won the election, but her Republican opponent, Jefferson Griffin, is still seeking to reverse the outcome by having ballots thrown out.

Trump also has continued to falsely claim he won the 2020 presidential election, even though there was no evidence of widespread fraud and the results were confirmed through multiple recounts, reviews and audits. His close adviser, billionaire Elon Musk, has also spread a flurry of unfounded claims about voter fraud involving noncitizens.

Musk and his affiliated groups sank at least $21 million into the Wisconsin Supreme Court race, and he personally paid three voters $1 million each for signing a petition to boost turnout. He had said the race was central to the โ€œfuture of America and Western civilization.โ€

But after the results came in, he said he โ€œexpected to loseโ€ and touted the successful passage of a voter ID amendment in Wisconsinโ€™s Constitution. Trump, who had endorsed Schimel, didnโ€™t post about the loss but used his Truth Social platform to celebrate the voter ID win.

An assessment: โ€˜Thatโ€™s democracy'

Not all Republicans watching the race were in a magnanimous mood as they processed the results. Peter Bernegger, the head of an election integrity organization who has brought numerous lawsuits against Wisconsin election clerks and offices, raised the specter that an โ€œalgorithmโ€ was behind Crawfordโ€™s win. InfoWars founder and conspiracy theorist Alex Jones reacted to the results on X, saying, โ€œElection fraud should be investigated."

But at Schimelโ€™s watch party, several supporters applauded his high road.

โ€œHe was all class,โ€ said Russell Jones, a 51-year-old attorney. โ€œThatโ€™s how you lose.โ€

Adam Manka, of the La Crosse County Republican Party, said he worries about how a liberal court could redraw the stateโ€™s congressional districts. โ€œBut you canโ€™t exactly change it,โ€ Manka said, calling Schimel โ€œvery gracefulโ€ in his defeat. โ€œThis is democracy.โ€

Crawford, in an interview Wednesday, said Schimel's phone call was "the way elections should concludeโ€ and said she would have done the same thing if she had lost.

The moment is a good example for future candidates, said Ari Mittleman, executive director of the Wisconsin-based nonprofit Keep Our Republic, which aims to rebuild trust and confidence in elections. He compared elections to a Green Bay Packers football game: โ€œWe know who won, we know who lost.โ€ He said he thinks Schimel, a lifelong Wisconsinite, understands that.

โ€œItโ€™s transparent, and we accept the final score,โ€ Mittleman said. โ€œThatโ€™s democracy.โ€

Schimel and his band, performing for a thinning crowd Tuesday night, took the loss in stride.

โ€œCan you ask them at the bar to get me a Coors Light please?โ€ Schimel said between songs. โ€œPut it on my tab.โ€

___

This story has been updated to correct the name of Jeff Mandell, previously misspelled as Mandel.

___

Associated Press writer Scott Bauer contributed from Madison, Wis. Swenson reported from New York. The Associated Press receives support from several private foundations to enhance its explanatory coverage of elections and democracy. See more about the APโ€™s democracy initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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