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  • Ep.50 - Supreme Court Debate Recap & Evers Good Friday Veto Dump | 4/6/26
    2026/04/06

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    In this episode of New Fashioned Conservatives, two semi-involved Wisconsin guys break down the high-stakes Wisconsin Supreme Court debate that took place this week, where the justices clashed over everything from election maps to abortion and the future of the court’s 4-3 balance following Justice Bradley's retirement.

    They also cover the arrest of the head imam at the Islamic Center of Wisconsin, who was picked up by ICE on immigration violations. The hosts roast Gov. Tony Evers for pulling a classic Friday news dump on Good Friday, vetoing a stack of Republican bills hoping most Wisconsinites would be offline or at church and miss the story entirely.

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    1 時間 7 分
  • Heartland Post x New Fashioned Conservatives Interview: Washington County Judge Candidate Grant Scaife
    2026/04/03

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    The Heartland Post joins forces with the New Fashioned Conservatives podcast, featuring their interview with Washington County Judge Candidate Grant Scaife.

    Despite being one of the most Republican counties in Wisconsin—and a key part of the historically pivotal WOW counties—Washington County’s four-seat circuit court bench is currently composed entirely of judges appointed by Tony Evers and one man is trying to change that: Grant Scaife

    Grant Scaife currently serves as an assistant district attorney in Washington County, where he has spent the past seven years prosecuting serious criminal cases. His experience includes handling homicides, sexual assaults, drug trafficking, domestic violence, and OWI offenses, often working closely with local law enforcement.

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    25 分
  • Ep.49 - Wisconsin has a Judge Problem | 3/29/26
    2026/03/30

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    In this episode of New Fashioned Conservatives, two semi-involved Wisconsin guys open with the biggest political football heading into November: exploding property taxes. They break down how Democrats are aggressively messaging the issue to win back seats, but question whether it’ll actually stick with voters or just become another tired partisan distraction. They give a warm welcome to a brand-new conservative media outlet, The Heartland Post, which promises sharp commentary and stories the mainstream media won’t touch. The hosts react with disbelief to State Rep. Francesca Hong’s latest idea: a “Hooker Bill of Rights” that would expand protections and regulations for sex work. They cover the shocking case of a Wisconsin judge who handed a kid no jail time, only for him to go out and commit murder just four days later, sparking a serious conversation about holding judges accountable when they have so much unchecked power. Tragedy hits home with the murder of a Wisconsin Trump supporter by her own coworker, who openly cited the victim’s politics and alleged “racism”—raising the question of whether this qualifies as a politically motivated hate crime. On the gubernatorial front, the latest poll shows Francesca Hong leading the Democratic primary for the fourth straight time as the field finally starts to take real shape. Meanwhile, new internal polling for Rebecca Cooke shows her only narrowly ahead of U.S. Rep. Derrick Van Orden (DVO)—hardly the confidence booster Democrats were hoping for heading into November.


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    1 時間 8 分
  • Ep.48 - DOUBLE Local Candidate Spotlight Feat. Matt Rosek & Scott Allen | 3/26/26
    2026/03/26

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    Justin takes on a double-header in the absence of Shadow Governor Vos and gives two candidates a spotlight ahead of the April 7th local elections--Matt Rosek for Mayor of Oconomowoc and Scott Allen for Mayor of Waukesha.

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    59 分
  • Ep.47 - New Retirements Guarantee New Era in November (regardless who wins) | 3/23/26
    2026/03/23

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    In this episode of New Fashioned Conservatives, two semi-involved Wisconsin guys kick things off with March Madness fever, as politicians across the state fill out their brackets and spark a lively debate: Should elected officials stay loyal and always pick Wisconsin teams like the Badgers, or should they actually pick who they genuinely think will win the tournament? They react to the shockingly fast cancellation of Cesar Chavez Day events in several cities—axed in less than a week, even quicker than the usual progressive cancellations. The hosts then dive into the heated debate in Washington County over renaming a major highway. Liberals are strongly opposed, but the hosts themselves are split on the idea, and some Republicans are pushing back too. They cover several Republican retirements announced recently, leading into a deeper conversation about how to bring younger people into the legislature for fresh perspectives. They specifically debate whether Will Martin should pivot and run for State Senate instead of Lieutenant Governor, but unsure if it's realistic. The guys criticize Democrats for putting the cart before the horse on the 2026 elections, acting overly confident while they predict that the November general might not split down traditional lines .Finally, they cover the Sports Betting bill and the NIL bill both heading to Governor Evers' desk for signature.


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    1 時間 13 分
  • Ep.46 - Ok This is Getting Old: Tommy, Please No Pt 3 | 3rd Chair: Wisconsin Conservative Sponge | 3/16/26
    2026/03/16

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    In this episode of New Fashioned Conservatives, two semi-involved Wisconsin guys dissect Supreme Court Justice Annette Ziegler's retirement announcement, vacating her seat in July 2027. They spotlight Mike Roberts' bid for State Senate as an entrepreneur emphasizing a common sense candidacy for a tough seat. The hosts question who's pushing former Gov. Tommy Thompson to "kick the tires" on a 2026 run at 85. In suburban politics, unabashed Democrat Mike Hallquist shakes up Brookfield's mayoral race, championing progressive policies on diversity and sustainability in a former red stronghold. They probe the troubling history of abuse in Oconto School District, where a February 2026 lawsuit revealed decades of mishandled complaints against staff, including sexual misconduct cases dating back to the 1990s. Gov. Tony Evers earns rare praise for signing the anti-grooming bill (AB 677), strengthening penalties for predatory behaviors toward minors and shifting from slaps on the wrist to potential jail time.

    The episode highlights a teacher's viral TikTok exposing her role in facilitating students' social transitions without parental notification. UW-Madison's lobbying for an NIL bill draws scrutiny, as it would move funds to allow for enhanced NIL efforts. The university also hosts a "Resist ICE Terror" workshop, while the hosts question if faculty involvement is organizing the event. Brad Schimel is out as Eastern District U.S. Attorney on March 15—due to archaic Senate blue-slip rules allowing home-state senators to block nominees—sparks debate on reforming the outdated system. Finally, Rep. Sylvia Ortiz-Velez pleads no contest to disorderly conduct charges stemming from her on-going run in with her former caucus.

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    1 時間 23 分
  • Ep.45 - Democrats Make Everything a Partisan Issue | 3/9/26
    2026/03/09

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    In this episode of New Fashioned Conservatives, two semi-involved Wisconsin guys break down Gov. Tony Evers' signing of the grooming bill which creates a felony for grooming children for sexual activity and requires school districts to adopt policies on appropriate staff-student communications—calling it a rare bipartisan win on child protection despite earlier Democratic resistance from the socialist caucus.

    They then dissect "Keldacare," State Sen. Kelda Roys' February 2026 healthcare platform for her gubernatorial bid, which would allow all Wisconsinites and businesses to buy into the state employee health plan.

    The New Richmond School District faces a U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights investigation launched over reports of allowing biological males in female restrooms, following parent concerns at January and February board meetings and a failed policy vote to enforce sex-based facilities—framed as a Title IX violation under the Trump administration's enforcement push.

    AJ Bayatpour exposed partisan blinders when he covered the U.S. Department of Education's "History Rocks" tour stop in Brookfield, where critics slammed it as "indoctrination" tied to right-wing groups like Turning Point USA, highlighting how Democrats view everything through a partisan lens.

    The hosts cover the sentencing of Caiden Stachowicz, the 20-year-old who set fire to U.S. Rep. Glenn Grothman's Fond du Lac office in January 2025 over the TikTok ban vote, receiving seven years in prison.

    Democratic congressional candidate Rebecca Cooke fled questions on ICE after calling it "disgusting" for community operations, refusing to clarify support for deporting violent criminal illegals in a viral confrontation. They review the contested Waukesha County sheriff election landscape heading into 2026. An update on the State Senate race to replace retiring Sen. Steve Nass notes early interest and a now competitive primary.

    The "Draft Ramthun" effort gains a new cringe AI-generated songs hyping the push—dismissed as desperate nostalgia from his 2022 election denial days.

    Finally, a jab at Secretary of State candidate Nate Pollnow, the farmer/auctioneer running to "reclaim" the office as "Secretary FOR the state" with promises of better recordkeeping and transparency—questioning if his outsider bid can shake up the race.

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    1 時間 11 分
  • Ep.44 - Never Underestimate Grassroots Support: Hong Leads in Her Second Poll | 3/2/26
    2026/03/02

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    In this episode of New Fashioned Conservatives, two semi-involved Wisconsin guys break down Vice President JD Vance's visit to Plover, where he rallied about 300 supporters at Pointe Precision—a machining facility in Wisconsin's 3rd Congressional District—touting Trump-era economic wins like affordability and fraud reduction while stumping hard for Rep. Derrick Van Orden's reelection and boosting Gov. candidate Tom Tiffany's momentum.

    They then tackle fresh charges recommended by the Wisconsin Elections Commission against 13 people tied to the failed 2024 recall effort against Assembly Speaker Robin Vos—accusations of fake signatures and false addresses on paperwork—calling it a dud attempt that fizzled and now faces criminal referrals.

    The hosts discuss the disorderly conduct charge against Rep. Sylvia Ortiz-Velez for alleged threats against a Democratic colleague over Hispanic Heritage Month and veterans' resolutions in 2025, viewing it as politically motivated infighting amid her caucus drama.

    The big doozy? The latest Marquette Law School Poll shows massive indecision: 65% of Democrats undecided in the gubernatorial primary, with State Rep. Francesca Hong edging out at 11% (tied with Mandela Barnes at 10% within margin of error), Sara Rodriguez at 6%, and others trailing. The hosts warn this fragmented field—now led by Hong in her second poll showing strength—could spell disaster for Democrats jockeying for position, risking a low-turnout primary mess that weakens their general election shot against a consolidated GOP.

    In the 7th Congressional District race, new entrants pile in after Trump's January 2026 endorsement of Michael Alfonso. That includes one democrat.

    Finally, they roast AG Josh Kaul for accepting funding from out-of-state billionaire-backed groups (like Bloomberg-linked entities) to support special prosecutors in DOJ cases, asking what could possibly go wrong with private money influencing public positions.

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    1 時間 15 分