Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Meet Fred Clark

Fred Clark will be in Ladysmith at Casa Mexicana on Thursday, January 29. Many of us met Fred ata gathering, and he is a wonderful candidate for US Congress. Stop in an chat.



Tuesday, January 13, 2026

2026 Monthly Meeting

This Thursday, January 15th, 2026, we will be holding our first meeting of the year at JT's Brewing in Ladysmith. 

You can see the information below. We will be having elections of officers starting at about 6:00 p.m. 

All executive committee positions are up for election, and anyone is eligible to be nominated for a position.

Anyone is eligible to vote if they have paid their annual dues to their Rusk Dems membership prior to voting. 

If you would like to pay your membership, use the link below. You can choose $25 for an individual or $35 for a couple. A student, veteran, or low income individual is $10.

Anyone who has paid since December 31st should forward me the confirmation.

the Democratic Party of Wisconsin — Donate via ActBlue https://share.google/h2hA21YuZtr4BfdwX

As always, you can expect great pizza, great conversation with like-minded individuals, and support from people in our local community. 

We hope to have some candidates stopping in to visit, but nothing is set specifically for any person. 

Please reach out if you have any questions about the event, elections of officers, or anything else.

See you soon!



Saturday, October 18, 2025

No Kings Rally

 ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธDemocrats LOVE America Rally๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
a.k.a. No Kings Rally ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿšซ๐Ÿ‘‘๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

Thank you Rusk County Democrats, friends, and supporters for showing up today to push back against an authoritarian regime that is behaving like a royal monarchy rather that duly elected officials that took an oath to uphold the constitution of the United States of America. 

Today, at least 125 of us stood proudly with millions upon millions of other Americans across this nation, waving our flags, defending our right to protest, and letting this regime know that we will fight to build back our democratic institution and defend what our forefathers died for and created this nation for. 

Someone read the preamble to the Constitution. A small group walked around and sang, No More Kings, with a ukulele player that just happened to choose our rally. (If you see this, please message us who you are! We appreciate you!) The group remaining at noon sang God Bless America. And two awesome democracy loving frogs joined our rally!

Never again. No more Kings! 

We the People...

are called in this moment to stop this country from going where this authoritarian wants to take us. 

If you want more information, to join our mailing list, or to know about events, like/follow this page, send a message here, or look at our website. ruskcountydems.org

Finally, if you have pictures or video you'd like to share, put it in the comments here or share on messenger so we can share them here and on our website. We'd love to see some more from attendees.

In Bernie's speech from today, he listed many groups that were told over the last 250 years that they wouldn't win whatever right or freedom they wanted based on that group. And yet, the people forged ahead together, and that group won. 

When we all fight together against authoritarianism, we'll win, too. 

✌๐Ÿป๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ✌๐Ÿป๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ✌๐Ÿป๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ✌๐Ÿป๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ✌๐Ÿป๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ✌๐Ÿป๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ✌๐Ÿป
#NoKingsDay  #NoKings

 





Sunday, October 12, 2025

Week of 10/13/25 Events

This is a reminder of the week's events!

Please note the location change for tomorrow's sign making and food project we're helping with.

**Pioneer bank is closed for Indigenous Peoples' Day (Columbus Day). Please go to the Ostenso Eye office to make signs. 

Also, bring non-perishable food items to either the Pizza event or No Kings rally. Food will go to the Thanksgiving Project!

Sign Making at OSTENSO EYE OFFICE  10am & 6pm
Oct 13 • Ostenso Eye Office • View details & RSVP https://calendar.app.google/R63oRFTQstbbvWmU6

Come to the meeting room to create signs for the No Kings event on Saturday, October 18th. You can meet at 10am or 6pm on Monday, October 13th to make signs with other Rusk County Dems and friends. Supplies will be provided.

Pizza & Politics W/Candidates (Gov. & 7th CD)
Oct 16 • 6 – 8 PM • View details & RSVP https://calendar.app.google/EB6Kt6YgUhddguTe8

Join us for Pizza & Politics At LJ's American Bar. Kelda Roys for Governor will join us.

Many of us women met Kelda during her first run for governor. She is currently a member of the WI Senate representing the 26th District. She was in the WI Assembly from 2009 to 2013. 


We will also be having Fred Clark running for 7th CD with us on Thursday. Here is a video from his campaign and a link to his website.



This will be a great chance to meet these candidates!

Also, bring non-perishable food items to the Pizza event. Food will go to the Thanksgiving Project!

No Kings Rally
Oct 18 • 9 AM – 12 PM • Rusk County Farmers Market • View details & RSVP https://calendar.app.google/HmWdw9Q8PnawC1dC9

Bring a friend! Bring a chair! Signs will be provided or bring your own. Come out to make a sign on Monday, October 13th at 10am or 6pm, as listed above.

Also, bring non-perishable food items. Food will go to the Thanksgiving Project!

RSVP at the link below!

We hope many of you can make it out to this week's events!
 
 

Friday, May 23, 2025

Rusk County Issues

The Democratic Party of Rusk County Wisconsin is the political home for people with diverse ideas.  The following position statements were developed by small teams of people, often including people with opposing views. It is our feeling that good government is never the product of strident ideologues or powerful individuals. It must belong to reasonable people willing to learn, promote and compromise for the greater good.

If you have differing views from these positions, we welcome hearing from you.  We might not agree but we will take note of your good faith views.

You may also be interested to read the Democratic Party of Wisconsin Platform.



Reproductive Rights

Today’s evangelical religious challenge to reproductive rights rings a bell to women who are old enough to have gone through the struggle for women’s health care that took place in the 60’s, 70’s and 80’s. Back in the ‘Good Old Days’, a woman couldn’t try her hand at sports other than cheerleading, buy a car without her husband’s signature or lead a team at work.

It has taken decades of incremental progress to get to a point point where 15 million people watch a women’s college basketball game and women hold the majority of slots in medical and law schools.

The wage gap might still be 16%, but back then it was 40%.

It has been a long and wearisome road and no woman wishes to repeat it.  We’re not going back to a quieter voice, to less opportunity and even less reward. We’re not going back to an age without birth control, to an age when it was “my body, my problem”, but never “my choice”.

This is a free country, or is supposed to be, but it’s a hollow claim when half the voters don’t have the freedom, the “agency”, reserved for the other half.

It is also a problem that crosses political lines, with 70% of voters favoring a solution that is neither far left or right.

Any talk denigrating women who want to have a political and cultural voice equal to men’s voices is not what the Rusk County Democratic Party will condone.



Immigration & the Southern Border

Immigration is a large, complex and multifaceted issue, with no easy solution to balance the needs of the many parties to the problem while respecting the humanity of those who seek to immigrate.

One problem stands out: the massive pressure at the southern border, where there are simply not enough resources, on all levels, to deal with immense numbers of immigrants.

In February 2024, Donald Trump forced Senate and House Republicans to abandon the bipartisan border solution they had negotiated with Democrats. The bill would have vastly increased the federal immigrant processing apparatus, greatly reduced the wait time for adjudication of refugee claims and sped the process for returning ineligible claimants to their home country.

The Rusk County Wi Democratic Party wants to have safe borders and believes the way to achieve this goal is by channeling the flow of immigrants.

There are many farms in Rusk County that would use immigrant labor if there were a safe, legal way of bringing in immigrants either for short term or long term stays in the US.

Anyone who has ever tried to deal with a flood knows that it cannot be done by batting at the water and believing that its entry can be totally denied, especially when the area that is battling the flood needs the water.  

The same is true with a flood of immigrants.  We in the US can use immigrant labor.  We need immigrant labor.  We CAN work out ways to have immigrant labor without drowning in a sea of immigrants. The first step in bringing this about is to realize that we cannot in good conscience or in good economic practice shut off all immigration. The next step would be to re-vitalize the above-mentioned bi-partisan immigration bill.  



Rural Healthcare

Rural Wisconsin now pays the price for continued state Republican obstruction of ACA (Obamacare) benefits. Two Chippewa Valley hospitals operated by the Catholic Sisters of the Sorrowful Mother and a large network of associated Previa Clinics closed in early Spring 2024. The ACA provided Medicaid benefits to uninsured folks with marginal jobs in food service, health care, and retail with incomes too “high” to qualify for standard Medicaid.

Not in Wisconsin, not where a Republican legislature believes more in “trickle down” than support for the demand side, the patient side, of the health care economy. An expanded Medicaid would have made a difference for those now closed hospitals and clinics if their unreimbursed charity care had been underwritten by the ACA.

The new Budget Bill goes beyond attacking the ACA itself. Yet ACA insurance is popular, affordable, and important for the safety and security of families. Attacks on the ACA parallel Republican attacks on Medicare (and Social Security). Preserving these programs depends on vigorous public support as well as Democrats in office.



Climate Change

The Earth is warming at a rate nearly 70 times faster than it did during natural warming periods of the past.  This is a serious problem. More serious than the warming is that many Americans are unaware or misinformed about climate change; less than half of Americans see global warming as a threat to them.

When a planet or a satellite (such as our Moon) does not have an atmosphere, the heat energy it receives from the Sun is lost almost immediately. Our atmosphere on the other hand absorbs and holds heat near the Earth’s surface; the Earth is therefore a warm and hospitable place where life can exist. The gases in the atmosphere that absorb and hold heat are large gas molecules, greenhouse gases. Water vapor, carbon dioxide, and methane are all greenhouse gases. The warming that is occurring is caused by an increase in the amount of greenhouse gases, especially carbon dioxide.

When fossil fuels are burned, the carbon that is released as carbon dioxide has been underground in oil or coal for millions of years. Now it is entering the atmosphere as a greenhouse gas that absorbs heat and warms the Earth. In the year 1790, when the use of fossil fuels expanded with the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was 280 ppm; in 2024 the count was 422 ppm.

If all citizens do not make the issue of climate change a priority soon, future generations of humans will face problems that are inconceivable in seriousness.

For more information visit 350.org.



Frac Sand Mining

Frac sand, characteristically hard and round, was deposited by a shallow sea nearly 500 million years ago. The word frac comes from hydraulic fracturing, a process petroleum companies use to free trapped natural gas along with oil from depleted wells; frac sand is mined in Wisconsin and Minnesota and used in oil fields around the country. While hydrofracking has increased production of domestic energy, it also perpetuates the illusion that energy from fossil fuels will last forever. Humanity must soon abandon the use of fossil fuels if we hope to avert the devastating effects of climate change.  Hydrofracking enables the continued use of fossil fuels and releases methane, the most potent of greenhouse gases, into the atmosphere.

The frac sand industry should be closely regulated to protect groundwater and air quality locally, as well as where hydrofracking occurs. We also need to ensure that economic benefits are shared fairly with local stakeholders as well as multinational corporations. Today we see permanent alterations to our landscape and collusion between mining companies and the state government with attempts to erode local control over protection of natural resources, transportation, zoning, and more.

We, the Democratic Party of Rusk County believe that Americans should not be working to further develop fossil fuels but should be developing carbon-free alternative energy sources. All citizens, regardless of political affiliation, must consider not just the short-term economic gains, but also long-term impacts of continued use of fossil fuels. It is future generations that will reap the benefits or the consequences of our decisions.



Lesbian, Gay, Bi-sexual, Transgender and Queer (LGBTQ) Rights

The Democratic Party of Rusk County holds the view that lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, transgender and queer citizens should be afforded the same rights as straight people, without exception.



Post-Secondary Education

Rusk County is fortunate to have efficiently managed, low cost, high quality technical and liberal arts education, conveniently located nearby,  UWEC-Barron County and Northwood Tech are excellent institutions that bring to life one of our most important American values.  Every one of us, regardless of wealth, should have the chance to learn the skills needed for a bright future, without being ransomed for decades to bank loans. Education must provide for the entire spectrum of life and career goals whether that be immediate job training, a two year diploma, a bachelor¹s degree, or a portal to post-graduate education and professional certification.

 



Public Education

Public education is an investment in the foundation of a democratic society. Our public schools are the heart and soul of our communities and serve all students and their families. Wisconsin’s legacy of supporting opportunity for its citizens is best realized when we adequately fund high quality K-12 education and staff our public schools with fully certified, highly qualified professionals. We submit that our schools are not currently being adequately funded by our state legislature and that adequate funding must be restored and current certification requirements must be maintained.

 



Work & Wages

We applaud small and large businesses that seek to ensure that employees have adequate work hours, fair wages, decent work conditions, and the respect of good managers. Employees need benefits including paid time off and paid family leave. We support the right of workers to organize and use the tools of effective unions.