MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin voted Tuesday for Jill Underly to remain as the state’s top education official during President Donald Trump’s second term, choosing the Democratic-backed incumbent over a Republican-supported critic.
Wisconsin voters also decided to enshrine the state’s voter ID law in the state constitution.
Both contests had sharp partisan divisions, though they have drawn far less spending and national attention than the race for control of the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
Here’s a look at the two races:
Union-backed incumbent defeats GOP-backed voucher advocate
Underly, the Democratic-backed state education chief, defeated her Republican-aligned opponent, Brittany Kinser. Unofficial results showed Underly with almost 53% of the vote with 85% of votes counted statewide.
‘‘Tonight, we celebrate a victory not just for our campaign, but for every educator, family and most importantly - kids - across our great state,‘’ Underly said in a statement.
Underly will guide policies affecting K-12 schools as Trump moves to eliminate the U.S. Department of Education. Her second term comes at a time when test scores are still recovering from the pandemic, Wisconsin’s achievement gap between white and Black students remains the worst in the country and more schools are asking voters to raise property taxes to pay for operations.