Here and Now
Zac Schultz on Rodriguez Ending her 2026 Run for Governor
Clip: Season 2500 Episode 2503 | 5m 9sVideo has Closed Captions
Zac Schultz on what Sara Rodrigues dropping out of the 2026 race for governor means.
"Here & Now" senior political reporter Zac Schultz discusses what Sara Rodriguez dropping out of the 2026 race for governor means for remaining Democratic primary candidates and the general election.
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Here and Now is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin
Here and Now
Zac Schultz on Rodriguez Ending her 2026 Run for Governor
Clip: Season 2500 Episode 2503 | 5m 9sVideo has Closed Captions
"Here & Now" senior political reporter Zac Schultz discusses what Sara Rodriguez dropping out of the 2026 race for governor means for remaining Democratic primary candidates and the general election.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship>> After a Monday news conference where she fired her campaign manager for messing up the financial reports but still vowed to stay in the race, Democratic primary candidate for governor Sarah Rodriguez, today dropped out.
She said the fundraising reporting mess would be too big of a distraction.
Senior political reporter Zac Schultz is here with details on.
Hi, Zac.
>> Hello, Fred.
>> So this has been almost like a slow motion train wreck.
Exactly what happened.
>> It's been a back and forth all week.
Last week we were talking about all the momentum she had.
The candidates that had dropped out were endorsing her.
I was in touch with the campaign to see where she be out in the field this week.
We were going to touch base with all the Democratic candidates, and said, well, we're still figuring out that schedule.
Well, by Sunday, they'd fired her campaign manager.
By Monday, she has a press conference saying, I'm in the race, but fundraising is a little weaker.
We talked to the other candidates.
They're like, authority.
It says you can run things and you don't have any oversight of your own campaign.
Her campaign finance sheets come and show she's broke and deeply in debt.
Then she makes another press conference to say that she's got all this money and then quickly says, nope, sorry, that was an error as well.
And now she's out.
So it's been back and forth, people really trying to figure out where is the truth.
And when she says it was a distraction, she's 100% most honest thing that's been said about the campaign all week, is this was dominating all the headlines and would have if she would have stayed in this race.
>> She was considered a frontrunner, though.
>> Absolutely.
When you were looking at if you looked at that Democratic primary in terms of lanes, there was clearly Francesca Hong in the more progressive far left lane.
She had owned that for quite a while in this race, and it was a question of who could coalesce more of that centrist moderate candidacy.
And Sara Rodriguez was taking that over.
And now that it's gone, it's a question of who takes advantage of that.
Where do those voters go?
>> So now Governor Evers is reportedly talking about backing an effort to draw David Crowley back into the race.
Why?
What happened there with him?
>> Well, David Crowley dropped out almost a couple of weeks ago, saying it was clear he wasn't going to have a lane it was assumed he was contesting with Rodriguez saw her momentum and knew he couldn't get their fundraising reports that they just were filed so that he actually has plenty of cash on hand, a lot more than her.
Significantly, if her transparent from the beginning, there's a question of whether he would have dropped out because he would have been significantly ahead of her.
There are other centrists that are saying, hey, bring him back.
He's the next best person to take that mantle with Rodriguez out of the race.
And now it's a question of whether he will do that and what will that look like?
>> Yeah.
Who else stands to gain?
>> Well, Joel Brennan clearly says this is his moment to shine and people to hear his name for the first time.
If you're not finely tuned into this race.
Kelda Roys Mandela Barnes.
They all claim that they can benefit from this Francesca Hong to a degree, because there there were people that backed that just want a Democrat who can win.
And now she may have a more open race all the way to winning this primary.
If her main contender from the centrist candidacy falls apart.
>> So meanwhile, Republican candidate Tom Tiffany not only has gobs of money comparatively, but this must be great for the GOP.
>> Oh, they absolutely love this.
Any time you see the other party falling apart on their own mistakes missteps, then it's good news for Tom Tiffany, because he's had this whole opportunity all summer long to run positive ads.
He's got a ton of money in the bank, 2 million cash on hand, pretty much all of that coming from billionaires who have given to the party that have given to him the billionaire loophole that he came on our air and criticized a few months ago he's now taking advantage of.
But that's politics.
He's definitely in a much better position.
I did ask the Democratic candidates this week, can you overcome that after this primary?
And they said, absolutely.
Once we get past August, then we can start contrasting the record that he tries to portray versus his record attached to Trump.
>> Meanwhile, the Republicans are airing ads talking about Francesca Hong.
And what are they doing there?
>> Well, they're technically they are negative ads, but they're airing them in Madison, Milwaukee, 2 Francesca Hong base in an attempt to rile them up.
We've seen groups play in Democratic primaries across the country in an effort to boost what they view as a weaker candidate, a more socialist, progressive candidate.
There are lots of statements in Francesca Hong background that she owns that do not play well according to centrist, or perhaps in a regular contest in November.
>> Have you ever seen anything like this in your coverage of politics in Wisconsin over the years?
>> Not like this.
We've seen campaigns fall apart.
We've seen campaigns run out of money and be deep in debt.
That's not new.
It's the the discord that it all came out and this back and forth throughout the week.
If this had come out in February or March and those statements have been corrected, she probably moved on because she still had support this week.
Just this week, talking to people out in the field, she won the Ozaukee County Democratic straw poll with Francesca Hong in the audience.
So the support was still there, but it was clear that she could not change the message away from her oversight of her own campaign to back to one
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