By JOSEPH AX Reuters
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Wisconsin voters were choosing a new justice for the state’s top court on Tuesday in a race that offers an early referendum on Donald Trump’s presidency, with abortion rights, labor rights and election rules all potentially in the balance.

The campaign is easily the most expensive judicial contest in U.S. history. More than $90 million has been spent by the candidates, the state parties and outside groups — including more than $21 million by Trump ally Elon Musk and political groups with ties to him, according to a tally from New York University’s Brennan Center.

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Liberal Susan Crawford, a county judge, and conservative Brad Schimel, a former Republican state attorney general and also a county judge, are vying for a seat on the court that currently has a 4-3 liberal edge, but with one liberal retiring.

The race is technically non-partisan, though Trump has endorsed Schimel and state Democrats and Republicans have lined up behind their preferred candidate.

Polls close at 8 p.m. CDT (0100 GMT).

The court is likely to issue critical rulings on voting rights and election rules ahead of the 2026 midterms and the 2028 presidential race, when Wisconsin is expected to remain a central battleground. Trump won Wisconsin in November by less than a percentage point — the closest margin of any state.

The court is also poised to decide whether abortion rights should remain legal statewide and could revisit a Republican-backed law that stripped most public employee unions of collective bargaining rights.

On Tuesday, Wisconsin voter Gary Christenson, a retiree, said he would support Schimel.

“If a liberal gets in there, they’re going to continue to try to destroy Trump’s efforts to downsize the government,” he said.

Another voter, West Roberts, 26, pledged to vote for Crawford.

“Supporting everyday people is more important than people who were supporting Elon Musk or the multi-billionaires,” Roberts said.

Musk, whose so-called Department of Government Efficiency is overseeing Trump’s unprecedented cost-cutting campaign at the federal government, has become a central figure in the race. He held a rally on Sunday night where his main super PAC, or political action committee, handed out $1 million checks to two voters.

Wisconsin’s Democratic attorney general, Josh Kaul, sued to block the payments, arguing that they violated a state anti-bribery law. The state Supreme Court declined to take up the case without comment shortly before Sunday’s event.

Musk, who spent more than $250 million to help Trump win election in November, also promised to pay volunteers $20 for every voter they recruit before Tuesday’s election. On Tuesday he offered $100 to voters to upload a photo of anyone holding a picture of Schimel while gesturing thumbs up.