2026 Wisconsin Supreme Court Voter Guide – Lazar v. Taylor

To download a PDF of this guide in English, click here.

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Why your April 7 vote matters

The election on April 7 will decide a seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court. Maria Lazar and Chris Taylor are running for a ten-year term. Both are currently judges on the Wisconsin Court of Appeals. The election is nonpartisan, but Lazar is generally seen as a conservative and Taylor as a liberal. Liberal justices currently have a 4-3 majority on the Court. If Lazar wins, that status won’t change. If Taylor wins, the liberal majority will be 5-2. In 2019, 6,000 votes decided a Wisconsin Supreme Court seat, while three in four eligible voters stayed home. This election could be just as close.

The Wisconsin Supreme Court decides important questions of state law

In recent years, the Court overturned an 1849 total ban on abortions beginning at conception, and ruled that the state can regulate PFAS, known as forever chemicals. It also ruled unanimously against an attempt in the state Senate to fire the Wisconsin Elections Commission’s nonpartisan administrator Meagan Wolfe.

The Court declined to hear a lawsuit that sought to redraw the state’s congressional map. It also declined to hear a lawsuit seeking to end the state’s taxpayer-funded private school voucher program. The Court also struck down legislature-drawn legislative maps for failing to meet certain requirements in the Wisconsin constitution. In a meat packing case, the Court ruled that workers should be paid for time spent putting on or removing protective gear.

The winner of this election may be a part of any further ruling on Act 10, which effectively ended collective bargaining for most Wisconsin public employees, as well as any potential redistricting and voting laws cases, such as a 2022 case where the Court banned ballot drop boxes.

To help you decide

Both Lazar and Taylor write that they will follow and uphold the Constitution, and both state that their personal views will not affect their decisions. Here’s background on their public statements, actions, relevant judicial rulings, experience, and publicized endorsements. Follow our links to get further information.

The Candidates

Maria Lazar

Maria Lazar

Chris Taylor

Chris Taylor

Maria Lazar

Maria S. Lazar is currently an appellate judge in the Wisconsin Court of Appeals. She was a Waukesha County Circuit Court Judge from 2015 to 2022. She was a Wisconsin Assistant Attorney General from 2010 to 2015 and before that was an attorney in private practice from 1989 to 2010. She earned a bachelor’s degree in history, with minors in English and political science, from Mount Mary University, and her J.D. degree from Georgetown University Law Center.

Lazar’s endorsements: As of publication, no endorsements were listed on Maria Lazar’s website or were otherwise available.


Chris Taylor

  • On abortion, Taylor writes that she values “women…having the right to make those personal, private health care decisions.” In the Wisconsin Assembly she introduced a bill specifying “that every woman has the fundamental right to choose to obtain a safe and legal abortion,” except “after viability unless her life or health is endangered.”
  • On criminal justice, she introduced a bill specifying that in law enforcement, “deadly force is to be used only as the last resort.” She introduced a bill that would require police officers to have at least eight hours of training in de-escalation techniques and use of force options.
  • On the environment, in the Wisconsin Assembly Taylor introduced a bill that would require the DNR to establish and enforce regulatory standards for PFAS, also known as “forever chemicals.” She introduced a bill that would allow cities and towns to regulate pesticides.
  • On gun laws, she introduced a bill to prohibit anyone found guilty of misdemeanor domestic violence from possessing a firearm (expanding from the current felony-level prohibition). In a 2018 interview, she supported background checks and a red flag law. (No recent statements found.)
  • On labor, Taylor said, “I’m honored to have the support of the Wisconsin AFL-CIO in this race. Every working family deserves to have their rights and freedoms protected.”
  • On redistricting, she sponsored a bill in 2017 that would have created new procedures for preparing redistricting plans. It would establish a Redistricting Advisory Commission and prohibit “redistricting plans from abridging the right to vote on account of race or color or because a person is a member of a language minority group.”
  • On voting rules, as an appellate judge, Taylor ruled that missing information in a witness’s address does not invalidate an absentee ballot, so long as the included information is sufficient for a witness to still be contacted by a municipal clerk. In the Assembly, she introduced a bill to allow 17 year olds to vote in a primary election if they turn 18 by the date of the following general election.
  • On her priorities, Taylor says she would make sure that people’s “Constitutional rights are protected.” It is important “for our courts to be places where people feel heard, respected, and treated equally under the law.”

Chris Taylor is currently an appellate judge in the Wisconsin Court of Appeals. She was a Dane County Circuit Court Judge from 2020 to 2023, and before that a representative in the Wisconsin Legislature from 2011 to 2020. She was the Policy/Political Director for Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin from 2003 to 2011 and before that an attorney in private practice from 1996 to 2002. She earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania and her J.D. degree from the University of Wisconsin Law School.

Taylor’s endorsements include: Justices Susan Crawford, Rebecca Dallet, Jill Karofsky, and Janet Protasiewicz; former justice Louis Butler; Senator Tammy Baldwin; 156 former and current Wisconsin judges; and Wisconsin AFL-CIO, United Steelworkers, United Auto Workers Region 4, and American Federation of Teachers Wisconsin.


guides.vote is a nonpartisan effort to show where candidates stand. We do not support or oppose any political party or candidate. Use the QR code on the right for online versions, including links to reliable sources. See Vote411.org for information on how to vote. For campuses, see Campus Vote Project’s state-specific guides to student voting rules.

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Maria Lazar

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Chris Taylor

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Maria Lazar

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Chris Taylor

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