They hate Donald Trump’s tweets. They worry about his temperament. They’re still uncomfortable with the name-calling.
But many voters in Milwaukee’s Republican suburbs like his court appointments. And they approve of his stewardship of the economy.
How those suburban voters square those feelings is likely to determine the president’s fate in Wisconsin according to interviews with more than two dozen organizers, operatives and party leaders from both sides in a state that proved crucial to Trump’s upset victory in 2016.