President Barack Obama won heavily-contested Wisconsin, a swing state blanketed by both campaigns in the closing weeks of the race. With 72 percent of precincts reporting, Obama had 51.7 percent of the vote to 47.2 percent for challenger Mitt Romney.
No Republican has taken the Badger state since Ronald Reagan in 1984, and Obama took the state by 14 points in 2008. A key brick in Obama's Midwest firewall, the president trammeled from Green Bay to Madison to Milwaukee in the last week of the campaign as outside groups dumped a record number of ads onto the airwaves.
Democrats leaned on the state's progressive underpinnings and the state's same-day registration – which helps bring out younger, Democratic-leaning voters – to lead Obama to victory.
Republicans, meanwhile, felt they owned an enthusiasm advantage because Gov. Scott Walker won a recall election earlier this year. They also counted on the state native Paul Ryan's presence on the ticket to get out the Republican vote.
Senate
Tammy Baldwin (D) outraced former four-term governor Tommy Thompson (R) to fill a seat vacated by retiring Democrat Herb Kohl. With 72 percent of precincts reporting, Baldwin led Thompson 50.5 to 46.9 percent. The win was crucial to the Democrats' holding a majority in the Senate. A six-term Congresswoman, Baldwin will become the first openly gay Senator in U.S. history. The Madison native ran unopposed in her primary, while Thompson had to battle through a bitter primary season. The back-and-forth race initially favored Thompson, who served as governor for 14 years, but swung toward Baldwin last month. High turnout for Obama was seen as key to her win.
House
There was much less drama on the House front. Republican vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan retained his seat in the first district, while freshman Congressman Sean P. Duffy (R), who was targeted by Democrats, also won.
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