MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin Democratic Gov. Tony Evers used his seventh State of the State speech Wednesday to urge the Republican-controlled Legislature to enact a wide range of proposals they have rejected in the past, including numerous gun control measures just a month after there was a school shooting not far from the state Capitol.
Wisconsin's Evers calls for gun control measures and a bipartisan approach to immigration
Wisconsin Democratic Gov. Tony Evers used his seventh State of the State speech Wednesday to urge the Republican-controlled Legislature to enact a wide range of proposals they have rejected in the past, including numerous gun control measures just a month after there was a school shooting not far from the state Capitol.
By SCOTT BAUER
Republicans were quick to dismiss his proposals, much as they have the past six years.
Here’s what to know about the speech from Evers, a Democrat who may run for a third term next year in the battleground state:
A bipartisan approach to immigration and health care
Evers, without mentioning President Donald Trump by name, said ‘’there is a lot of angst about what may happen in the days, months, and years ahead.‘’
‘‘I have always been willing to work with anyone who is willing to do the right thing for the people of Wisconsin,‘’ Evers said. ‘’And that has not changed. But I will not compromise on our Wisconsin values of treating people with kindness, dignity, empathy, and respect.‘’
Evers called for bipartisan efforts to address immigration.
Assembly Speaker Robin Vos said Republicans would introduce a bill next week that requires cooperation with federal law enforcement officials who are working to deport people who have committed a crime and are in the country illegally.
‘‘He didn’t pay attention to what happened in this state in the election in November,‘’ Assembly Majority Leader Tyler August said of Evers. ‘’President Trump won Wisconsin and one of the cornerstones of his campaign was about illegal immigration. ... He’s clearly pushing back against the president."
Wisconsin is one of 22 states suing the federal government over Trump’s attempt to end birthright citizenship.
Wisconsin is one of the ‘’blue wall'' states that Trump won in 2016 but lost in 2020. Trump carried Wisconsin in 2024 on his way back to the White House.
Gun control is a renewed priority despite Republican opposition
Evers called for a series of gun control measures five weeks after school shooting just 6 miles (9.6 kilometers) from the Capitol that left a teacher and 14-year-old student dead. The 15-year-old shooter shot and killed herself.
Evers called for universal background checks for gun purchases and restoring a 48-hour waiting period for gun purchases, a law that Republicans repealed in 2015.
He also called for banning the purchase of ‘’ghost guns'' and closing a loophole that allows for domestic abusers to own firearms.
Evers also called for incentives and new requirements to safely secure firearms and a ‘’red flag'' law that would allow judges to take guns away from people determined to be a risk to themselves or others.
Republican legislative leaders said that all of the gun control measures would be rejected.
The governor last week created a state office for violence prevention, which Republicans vowed not to fund after federal funding runs out in two years.
Evers, a former teacher and state superintendent of schools, also called for spending $300 million to provide comprehensive mental health services in schools statewide. That would be 10 times the amount the Legislature approved for school mental health services in the last budget.
Republicans vow to reject proposals, push for cutting taxes instead
Republican leaders immediately rejected the bulk of what Evers called for, saying they instead would be pushing for a tax cut of nearly $1,000 for every taxpayer in the state.
Evers' speech ‘’was chock full of liberal wishes, empty promises and a whole lot of things that are not going to happen in Wisconsin,‘’ Vos said.
Declaring 2025 as ‘’The Year of the Kid," Evers called on Republicans to approve $500 million to lower the cost of child care. The bulk of that would go toward funding the Child Care Counts program for the next two years. Without more funding, the program — which was created during the COVID-19 pandemic — is slated to end in June.
Republicans said they would not support that additional funding.
Evers also called for creating new programs designed to set price ceilings for prescription drugs and improve oversight of drug companies, removing the state sales tax on over-the-counter medications and capping the copay on insulin at $35.
In an emotional moment, Evers welcomed the widow and parents of former state Rep. Jonathan Brostoff, who died by suicide in November. Evers, his voice cracking with emotion, talked about Brostoff’s death when introducing a new program that would allow people to temporarily and voluntarily register to prevent themselves from purchasing a firearm.
Vos said that invoking Brostoff was a ‘’cheap political stunt'' and ‘’kind of sad.‘’
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SCOTT BAUER
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