What will bipartisanship look like after Wisconsin’s midterm elections?
During his first term, Gov. Tony Evers vetoed over 120 bills coming from the Republican-controlled Legislature. There wasn’t much legislative consensus between the two parties.
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During his first term, Gov. Tony Evers vetoed over 120 bills coming from the Republican-controlled Legislature. There wasn’t much legislative consensus between the two parties.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison prides itself on the Wisconsin Idea, the idea that education should influence people's lives beyond the classroom. This fall, three UW students put that into action.
Madison Police Department (MPD) responded to a car collision that took place around 6 p.m. Wednesday at the intersection of Regent and Park St. near the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus.
Shelby Fosco has been on the frontlines of several important Wisconsin elections. As a five-year veteran of University of Wisconsin-Madison voter engagement coalition BadgersVote, it’s her job to get students to the polls.
An attempt made by the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Associated Students of Madison (ASM) to improve the shared governance body across the UW system failed to pass Monday. This long awaited decision came over a year after the legislation was originally approved through the Wisconsin State Statute.
Wisconsin students are experiencing a steep decline in reading test scores, and educators are working toward a solution.
As more and more commercial chains open in downtown Madison, residents and University of Wisconsin-Madison students question storefronts’ impacts on the overall culture and atmosphere of the historical State Street.
The newly formed Indigenous Student Center Coalition (ISCC) — a collaboration of six different indigenous organizations within the Indigenous Student Center (ISC) — planned a variety of programs and events for Native November, a celebration of Native American History Month.
Comedian, journalist and Wisconsin native Charlie Berens was announced as this year's winter commencement speaker. Berens graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2009 and is best known as the creator of the Manitowoc Minute.
Through poetry, song and speech, indigenous scholar Lyla June of the Diné explained at a Distinguished Lecture Series event at the University of Wisconsin-Madison Monday night that indigenous cultures’ agricultural practices and harmony with nature may be the solution for modern problems.
The Madison Common Council will decide on funding for the Madison Public Market in the coming days.
With winter approaching, downtown Madison will hold a six week festival called Shine On Madison presented by Don’s Home Furniture — running from Nov. 19 to Jan. 9. The event is put on by Madison’s Central Business Improvement District (BID) and includes family friendly and community building events throughout the holiday season.
The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on a bill to codify same-sex marriage equality this week after a bipartisan group of senators introduced a new amendment addressing Republican concerns.
The Supreme Court’s decision in two major cases challenging affirmative action may have serious implications for affirmative action policies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. If affirmative action is overturned, schools across the nation may be prohibited from using race as a consideration in the admissions process, according to the New York Times.
Madison’s mayoral race kicked off last week with an announcement from a well-known city figure.
Visits to a cranberry marsh, state fairs, sporting events, agricultural sectors, and meetings with alums, students, faculty, civic leaders and legislators have marked the start of University of Wisconsin-Madison Chancellor Jennifer Mnookin’s tenure.
University of Wisconsin-Madison Gender and Women’s Studies Professor Sami Schalk recently released her second book “Black Disability Politics.” The book was designed to bridge a gap between Black activism and disability activism because, as a disability activist, Schalk said the Black perspective is often neglected or not seen in the disability studies field.
A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit filed by a former primate caretaker at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s primate research center last week following allegations that the university violated the First Amendment.
A purple, seemingly harmless flower, has cost many people their lives despite its inconspicuous appearance. Originally used for medicine, the poppy plant was mankind’s first painkiller.
Take a walk down State Street and you’re sure to see them — stores advertising products like CBD, Delta-8 and an assortment of other recreational and medicinal items. While these stores can seem ubiquitous today, all of their products are actually relatively new, only having been legalized a few years ago.