Wisconsin Democrats focus on Sen. Ron Johnson at state convention after Jan. 6 committee says he attempted to deliver fake GOP electors
Wisconsin Democrats looking to unseat Republican Sen. Ron Johnson focused their attacks on him Sunday, and not each other, as the eight candidates made their case to party activists at the state convention held six weeks before the primary.
The Democratic Senate candidates blasted Johnson for his attempt to deliver fake Republican Electoral College ballots to then-Vice President Mike Pence after the 2020 election, his skepticism over COVID-19 vaccines, his voting for a tax law that benefited him, and his support for overturning Roe v. Wade.
During the House Jan. 6 committee public hearings earlier this month, the committee revealed text messages in which a Johnson staffer told a Pence aide that the senator was ready to deliver fraudulent ballots to the vice president. "Do not give that to him," Pence's aide responded.
Asked if he ever contacted Pence personally about electors, Johnson told CBS News' Robert Costa in a text "the answer is NO," adding "This is a complete NON story." The texts were confirmed by a Pence aide to CBS News.
The race in Wisconsin, which Donald Trump carried in 2016 but President Joe Biden won in 2020, could determine which party control the Senate. Polls show a tight Democratic primary between Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes and Alex Lasry, who is on leave from his job as an executive for the Milwaukee Bucks.
Barnes highlighted his upbringing in a "hard working union household" in Milwaukee and contrasted that with Johnson, who is a millionaire and former owner of a plastics company.
"It feels like the deck is stacked against us," Barnes said at the convention in La Crosse. "We don't want a hand out, we just want a fair shot. And we know we will never get that fair shot as long as Ron Johnson is in the Senate."
Lasry, a millionaire, touted his union support, his work to build the Fiserv Forum where the Bucks play and his role getting the Democratic National Convention to be in Milwaukee in 2020. He also contrasted himself with Johnson and blasted him for not fighting to persuade Oshkosh Defense to locate 1,000 jobs in Wisconsin rather than South Carolina.
"He's attacked organized labor," Lasry said. "Spread lies about COVID. Tried to overthrow the government. And he's even advocating to ship Wisconsin jobs to South Carolina."
Other candidates include state Treasurer Sarah Godlewski, Outagamie County Executive Tom Nelson, political organizer Steven Olikara, restaurant owner Kou Lee, state emergency management administrator Darrell Williams and attorney Peter Peckarsky.
Godlewski, the only woman in the race, said she would work to pass a law legalizing abortion now that the Supreme Court has overturned Roe v. Wade.
"If we had more Democratic women at that U.S. Senate table, we would have gotten this done a long time ago," Godlewski said.
Nelson, who has tried to run a humor-infused, folksy campaign similar to former Sen. Russ Feingold's first bid for office 30 years ago, had some of the strongest words for Johnson, calling him a "lying, treason-loving, woman-hating, Putin stooge."
He likened his own candidacy to a "strong Wisconsin beer," holding up a bottle of Spotted Cow from New Glarus Brewing Co. and compared the other Democratic candidates to a bottle of Bud Light.
Olikara, running his first campaign for office, emphasized his work leading the Millennial Action Project, which lobbied Congress to enact bipartisan legislation. He said the best ideas in Congress should be coming from regular people, "not the big money special interests."
The candidate were largely united on the issues, voicing support not for abortion rights, also gun control, ending the Senate filibuster, expanding voter rights and fighting climate change.
The winner of the Aug. 9 primary will advance to face Johnson, who is seeking a third term after previously promising to not run again. Johnson is also one of Trump's loudest backers and has been endorsed by the former president. He has espoused conspiracy theories related to the Jan. 6 insurrection and attempted to shift blame for what happened away from Trump supporters.