MADISON, Wis. - After two years of heart-wrenching defeats, capped by Republican Gov. Scott Walker's recall victory this summer, Wisconsin Democrats were on an unrelenting losing streak.
And when popular former Gov. Tommy Thompson decided to run for U.S. Senate, Republicans appeared poised for yet another prominent win that would give them control of both Wisconsin's Senate seats for the first time since the 1950s.
But there would be no GOP sweep.
President Barack Obama fired up his turnout machine and made winning Wisconsin a priority, pouring star power and money into the state. And fellow Democrat Tammy Baldwin, a liberal congresswoman who had never run in a statewide election, put together a well-funded, disciplined and smart campaign in the face of long odds against an opponent so well-known that most people simply call him "Tommy."
It paid off: Both Obama and Baldwin won their tight races Tuesday, keeping alive Wisconsin's tradition as a state that doesn't stay all blue or all red for too long.
The victories were the biggest scores for Democrats since Obama's surprising 14-point win in Wisconsin in 2008 that left Republicans sullen and confused. The GOP found itself in a similar position Tuesday night.
"We're all quite stunned at the results because we had such an energized base, the independents were falling our way," Republican state Sen. Alberta Darling, co-chair of Mitt Romney's Wisconsin campaign. "People were coming out of the woodwork to help. Maybe we were just not dealing with the real reality."
Republicans did, however, regain control of the state Senate and maintained their majority in the Assembly — once again giving the GOP full control of state government. Still, the Obama and Baldwin victories were significant for Democrats who were downtrodden just five months ago when Walker survived the recall, said Wisconsin Democratic Party Chairman Mike Tate.