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Ron Johnson
Ron Johnson

Fox News

time7 days ago

  • Business
  • Fox News

Ron Johnson

Ron Johnson is a United States senator from Wisconsin who was first elected to the role in 2010 after defeating the Democrat incumbent Russ Feingold. Now, Johnson is entering his third term as a senator after beating Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes in the 2022 election. Johnson went to college at the University of Minnesota and skipped his senior year of high school after gaining early acceptance to the school. He studied business and accounting and graduated with a BSB-Accounting degree. After college, he began working as an accountant at Jostens and then took his education one step further by enrolling in an MBA program. Johnson became a business owner when he and his wife Jane started a business with her brother called PACUR, a company that produces plastic sheets for packaging and printing. In 2010, Johnson was elected into the Senate after he defeated Feingold. The two battled it out again in 2016, where Johnson came out victorious for a second time. Most recently, Johnson was up against Lieutenant Governor Barnes for the Senate seat. Johnson won the election again for his third term in the role. Since joining the Senate, the Republican Senator served as the Chairman of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee from 2015 through 2021 and is a ranking member for the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. Other committees Johnson serves on are Budget, Foreign Relations and Commerce, Science and Transportation.

Sen. Ron Johnson hints he won't run in 2028, potentially setting up a showdown in Wisconsin
Sen. Ron Johnson hints he won't run in 2028, potentially setting up a showdown in Wisconsin

The Independent

time29-05-2025

  • Business
  • The Independent

Sen. Ron Johnson hints he won't run in 2028, potentially setting up a showdown in Wisconsin

Wisconsin Republican Senator Ron Johnson dropped a hint Tuesday night that he may not run again for his seat in 2028, setting a potential showdown in the Dairy State. 'I learned in my second run, when I absolutely meant 'second and final,' you can't say never, never, okay? I don't want to. Yeah, I'd like to dig my heels in now, set this nation on a sustainable course and then go home,' Johnson said at an event in Milwaukee on Tuesday, according to The Hill. The senator added that he was 'just a guy from Oshkosh, just trying to — literally trying to save this country,' while saying that he did not 'covet' the title of Senator. At the same event, Johnson said that he agreed with Elon Musk's concerns about Trump's 'big, beautiful bill.' 'I sympathize with Elon being discouraged.' Johnson added that he was 'pretty confident' there was enough opposition 'to slow this process down until the president, our leadership, gets serious' about reducing spending. He said there was no amount of pressure Trump could put on him to change his position. Johnson held on to his seat in 2022 with a narrow victory over Mandela Barnes in a seat that the Democrats hoped to flip during the Biden administration. He was first elected in 2010 amid a surge in support for the Tea Party movement. There have been signs that the Republicans could be in danger of losing the seat in 2028 if Johnson stands down. Democratic Gov. Tony Evers won reelection in 2022. While Democratic-backed candidates for Wisconsin Supreme Court won in 2023 and in April, they took control of the court away from conservatives for the first time in 15 years, securing it until at least 2028. The state also went for Biden 2020. However, Trump carried the state in 2024.

Local legislators, leaders talk about the state of Wisconsin's biennial budget
Local legislators, leaders talk about the state of Wisconsin's biennial budget

Yahoo

time12-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Local legislators, leaders talk about the state of Wisconsin's biennial budget

EAU CLAIRE — With the time to pass a biennial budget coming up, the Joint Finance Committee started work last Thursday. On Friday, local legislators and leaders following the process sat down to talk about where we those efforts currently sit. The local advocacy breakfast hosted by the Eau Claire Chamber of Commerce housed four speakers Friday morning: Bill McCoshen, partner at Michael Best Strategies; John Jacobson, Director of Public Affairs for Ruder Ware; Rep. Jodi Emerson (D-Eau Claire), a member of the Wisconsin Assembly, and Sen. Romaine Quinn (R-Birchwood), a member of the Joint Finance Committee. The Joint Finance Committee's work started on Thursday by eliminating nearly 600 items from Gov. Tony Evers' budget proposal, as Wisconsin Republicans said they are starting from 'base' with the budget. McCoshen said this is not necessarily an exclusively partisan decision, as this action has been going on since 2010 as a means of eliminating 'all the policy from the budget.' As that is partly where work stands right now with the Joint Finance Committee, McCoshen said we are still pretty early in the process and there are things that may or may not make their way back in. 'Ultimately that is how the process plays out from there,' he said. 'It really depends if there is discussion between the east wing, which is the Governor's Office, and the Republican majorities.' 'We started yesterday, and frankly we are on time,' Quinn said on Friday. 'Our goal is to have a budget done on time by June 30, the end of our fiscal year. Yesterday was the starting process; we came in, brought the budget back to base and now we start building from the ground up. Where do we want to invest… What is the surplus, what is ongoing, what can we afford and now where does that go? Is it special ed for school funding? Is it property tax relief? Is it investment in health care? Is it investment in roads and infrastructure? That is where we will start having those conversations now.' Although the majority has not changed in Wisconsin, changes in both the assembly and senate may also impact the budget to a degree. With June 30 marking the end of the fiscal year, both legislative departments will have to vote and approve a budget ideally before that time. 'I don't know who is going to take it up first this year, but finance will build a budget over the next two months,' Quinn said. 'Every week, we will be meeting at least once, if not twice a week, going over agency by agency and building that and spending those funds until we get to the final product.' With the impact of the November 2024 election, senate Democrats picked up four seats and assembly Democrats picked up 10 seats. Talking about the budget process, McCoshen said the change does not necessarily guarantee anything at this time. 'It really boils down to 'do they need Democrats to pass a bill?' And if they do, that is when Democrats have a seat at the table,' he said. 'Just because the majority shrunk, doesn't automatically put the Democrats at the table.' But ultimately it is still fairly early in the process with the Joint Finance Committee starting their work on the state budget and Wisconsin Assembly and Senate members eventually needing to vote when the time comes. 'I think it absolutely will have an impact on the budget,' Jodi said. 'Especially in the Senate, Republicans are going to need Dem votes to make it happen.' Quinn said the change may make it harder to pass the budget from a Republican standpoint, and may make the budget a little more conservative due to the makeup of the legislature. In terms of what could be on the budget, Emerson said 'I think what is important is that we build a budget that works for working families. Whether you are a retired working family or a young working family, we need to do what is right for the people of Wisconsin. As we are talking about tax cuts, that needs to happen in the budget process. 'What do we do to make sure that tax payers have the programs they have come to rely on and expect, and also make this budget work for working families?' On the topic of what policies may come up during the next couple months, Quinn said, 'I think there will be a lot of conversations around what a potential tax cut looks like… When it is the budget time, literally everything is on the table. So everything is going to get talked about.'

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