Wisconsin lawmakers are voicing their condolences after more than 60 people were killed after an Army helicopter collided with a plane in Washington D.C. late Wednesday night.
Gov. Tony Evers in a letter to President Donald Trump said Wisconsinites "are rightfully alarmed and concerned" by a abrupt freeze on federal funds.
Sean Duffy’s first big test as secretary of the Department of Transportation came just one day after he was sworn into office. A commercial jet carrying 64 people collided in midair with an Army helicopter carrying three servicemembers Wednesday night near Washington,
WISCONSIN - Wisconsin filed a lawsuit with other states and Washington D.C. to fight the federal funding freeze on Tuesday, Jan. 28, which a federal judge temporarily blocked. Many Wisconsin agencies are in limbo, wondering what's next if and when the federal funding freeze is reinstated.
On Tuesday, the White House press secretary said the pause would not apply to payments to people – like food stamps, Medicare and social security.
Republican lawmakers in battleground state Wisconsin want to change state law to allow candidates to remove their names from the ballot.
The Senate confirmed Sean Duffy as the next secretary of transportation, marking a return to public office for former Wisconsin congressman.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy had been sworn in just hours before the deadly midair collision of a plane and helicopter near Washington, D.C.
Dane County Judge Susan Crawford, a liberal, will face former Wisconsin Attorney General conservative Brad Schimel
Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers has used his seventh State of the State speech to urge the Republican-controlled Legislature to enact a wide range of Democratic priorities they have rejected in the past
Luke Fickell has made another addition to his Wisconsin football staff official. The Badgers have hired Scott Power as the new Assistant Defensive Backs Coach,
Sean Duffy, the new transportation secretary, is facing his first major crisis just hours after his swearing-in. Duffy, who was confirmed by the Senate Tuesday, quickly emerged as a public face of the federal government’s response to the deadly plane crash at Reagan National Airport,