FINAL REPORT: Top donors to Wisconsin Supreme Court candidate Maria Lazar

Wisconsin Appeals Court Judge Maria Lazar is the political Right's candidate for state Supreme Court.

Court of Appeals Judge Maria Lazar lagged in fundraising since she announced her candidacy for the state’s high court, and is being outraised by her opponent by more than 6-1.

State Appeals Court Judge Maria Lazar has reported raising about $900,000 in her campaign to win a seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court, according to the Wisconsin Democracy campaign, which tracks political spending.

Her opponent, state Appeals Court Judge Chris Taylor of Madison, has reported raising more than $5.6 million since she announced her candidacy in May of 2025, according to the final campaign finance report before the election, which was due Monday.

Candidates can continue raising and spending funds until the election on April 7.

Lazar got into the race late, in October, after Supreme Court Justice Rebecca Bradley, whose seat is up for reelection, announced she was withdrawing after initially saying she would run. Taylor announced her candidacy five months earlier, in May of 2025, and has been fundraising aggressively since then.

Before becoming a judge, Lazar worked for five years as an assistant attorney general for the Wisconsin Department of Justice in Madison. She then served as a Circuit Court judge in Waukesha and has spent the last three years on the Court of Appeals, District II, which covers most of southeastern Wisconsin.

Wisconsin Democrats have dominated fundraising in recent years, as the state party has built a successful national machine. Perhaps unsurprisingly, candidates from the Left have thrashed candidates on the Right in races for state Supreme Court in recent years, winning by more than ten points in each of the last three elections.

While state law caps donations from individuals to candidates for state Supreme Court at $20,000 per election cycle, political parties in Wisconsin are not capped and can receive unlimited amounts from wealthy donors and then give unlimited amounts to political candidates. The Republican-controlled state Legislature could place caps on donations to and from political parties, but has not.

The 2026 race for Wisconsin Supreme Court is drawing much less attention – and money – than the race for the court last year, which saw more than $100 million raised and spent as the ideological majority of the court was at stake, and Elon Musk injected millions unsuccessfully trying to swing the election to the candidate on the political right.

Races for the Wisconsin Supreme Court are technically nonpartisan, but both major political parties back their preferred candidate. The open seat on the 7-justice state Supreme Court is being vacated by the retiring Bradley, a conservative stalwart. If Democrats flip the seat, the political left will improve its majority on the court to 5-2. Republicans holding it will maintain the ideological balance of 4-3 in favor of the left-leaning justices.

The general election is Tuesday, April 7. Eligible voters can register to vote on the day of the election by proving their residence and showing a government-issued ID to vote.

TOP DONORS TO LAZAR

NAMECITYNOTESAMOUNT
Republican Party of WisconsinMadison, WIpolitical parties in Wisconsin can give unlimited amounts to candidates$159k
Diane HendricksAfton, WIBillionaire owner & chair of ABC Supply$20,000
Tim SchmidtWest Bend, WIUSCCA Chairman, CEO of Delta Defense, an insurance/support agency for the USCCA$20,000
Gerald CouriOconomowoc, WIPresident of Couri Insurance Agency$20,000
Elizabeth UihleinLake Bluff, ILOwner of Uline and wife of Richard Uihlein$20,000
Stephen KiefferPrinceton, WIretired owner of Kieffer & Co, Inc, a business sign manufacturer$20,000
John MeierLahaina, HIRetired, early employee of Apple$20,000
Thea BuholzerMonroe, WIco-owner, Buhozer Brothers Cheese company$20,000
Glenda BuholzerMonroe, WIco-owner, Buhozer Brothers Cheese company$20,000
John M. SilsethBrookfield, WIBanking CEO$10,000
Patrick EnglishMilwaukee, WIExecutive Chairman of Fiduciary Management, an investment company$10,000
Fred M. YoungRacine, WIFormer president and CEO of Young Radiator, vehicle radiator manufacturer$10,000
Eric HovdeMadison, WICEO of Hovde Properties, former candidate for US Senate$10,000
Jodie Ann MuellerPewaukee, WIDental hygienist, wife of John Fleckenstein, owner of firearms manufacturer FLECK Tech$10,000
John E. ShafferChicago, ILFounder of HSA Commercial, a national real estate firm$10,000
Matthew NeumannHartland, WICEO of Nuemann Companies, a real estate developer$10,000
Ronald WengerMadison, WIRetired surgeon$10,000
Nancy TollFranklin, WIRetired$20,000
Edward PerkinsGrand Chute, WIRetired$10,000
Richard RoehlMarshfield, WICEO of trucking company Roehl Transport  $10,000
Michael DobrynioElkhart, WIBusiness owner$10,000

The Badger Project is an independent, reader-supported news nonprofit in Wisconsin.

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