United States | Crying over split milk

Vital election races in Wisconsin are awfully close

America’s dairyland is giving Democrats some heartburn

Senator Tammy Baldwin.
Photograph: Getty Images
|SHEBOYGAN, WISCONSIN

IT WAS ONCE common for states to split their pair of senators between the two major parties. In 2010 there were 19 such states. Today only three have true splits. In all three of those states—Ohio, Montana and Wisconsin—the Democrat-held seats are up for election in November. And all three could well be lost. Jon Tester faces an uphill re-election bid in Montana. In Ohio, Sherrod Brown, a third-term incumbent, must persuade a large share of Donald Trump voters to split their tickets (an increasingly rare phenomenon) if he is to remain in office. That leaves Tammy Baldwin, the twice-elected senator from Wisconsin, who is campaigning on the least Trumpy terrain of the three.

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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Crying over split milk”

From the October 19th 2024 edition

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