MADISON, Wis. — Democratic Gov. Tony Evers appointed a bankruptcy attorney Friday to replace a conservative-leaning Universities of Wisconsin regent who is refusing to step down, setting up another potential confirmation stalemate in the Republican-controlled state Senate.
Evers announced that he has appointed Tim Nixon to succeed Robert Atwell. Nixon works on law firm Godfrey & Kahn's Bankruptcy and Financial Restructuring Team. He holds a bachelor's degree from UW-Green Bay and a law degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
''This is an opportunity to give back, in a unique way, to an institution that has done much for me and my family,'' Nixon said in a statement released by Evers' office.
But it's unclear when or if Nixon will ever take a seat on the board.
Then-Gov. Scott Walker, a Republican, named Atwell a regent in May 2017. His seven-year term expires this month but he has said he won't step down until he chooses to do so or the state Senate confirms a successor.
The Legislature's two-year session ended this spring, and lawmakers aren't expected to return to Madison until January. Asked about the prospects of the Senate returning earlier for a confirmation vote, Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu's office said in a statement that Evers had only just announced the appointment and ''it is imperative that appointees demonstrate that they are qualified and will prioritize students' education.'' It did not elaborate.
The state Supreme Court ruled in 2022 that political appointees don't have to leave their posts until the Senate confirms a successor. The ruling came in a lawsuit Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul filed to force conservative Fred Prehn off the state Natural Resources Board.
Prehn's term ended in May 2021 but he refused to leave before his replacement, Sandra Naas, won Senate confirmation, extending Republican control of the board. He eventually stepped down of his own accord at the end of 2022. The Senate finally held a confirmation vote on Naas and three other Evers appointees to the Natural Resources Board this past October and — in effect — fired all four of them by refusing to confirm them.