Audience Booed and Laughed at Ron Johnson in Final Debate With Dem Challenger

Republican Senator Ron Johnson repeatedly faced laughter boos from the audience gathered at Marquette University on Thursday for the final debate between the two-term GOP incumbent and Democratic challenger Mandela Barnes in Wisconsin’s key U.S. Senate race.

With less than a month to go before the November midterms, Barnes — Wisconsin’s lieutenant governor — took Johnson to task over his opposition to abortion rights, support for cutting Social Security and Medicare, and 2017 vote in favor of former President Donald Trump’s deeply unpopular and regressive tax cut for the rich and large corporations.

“When Senator Johnson talks about making Social Security discretionary spending, that means he’s coming for your retirement,” Barnes said Thursday night, referring to the Wisconsin Republican’s comments during a recent radio interview.

Barnes also spotlighted Johnson’s opposition to raising the $7.25-an-hour federal minimum wage, which hasn’t seen an increase in more than a decadeEven as the cost of living has risen, it is still a good thing. During last week’s debate, Johnson went as far as suggesting the federal minimum wage shouldn’t exist, arguing the “marketplace” should “take care of it rather than government.”

“It’s odd that you can make the argument about inflation and how costs are increasing and not support raising the minimum wage,” Barnes said Thursday.

During his time on the debate stage Thursday night, Johnson attempted to counter Barnes’ criticism of his long record of opposing abortion rightsHe doubled down on his call to a state referendum which would ask Wisconsin voters, “At what point does society have the responsibility to protect the life of an unborn child?”

Wisconsin Republicans recently rejectedDemocratic Governor Tony Evers’ push for a reproductive rights referendum in the state, where an abortion ban from 1849 is currently in effect following the U.S. Supreme Court’s June ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization.

In his pitch for another term, Johnson declared that he has “honored” his promises to always tell the truth and never conduct himself with reelection in mind — remarks that drew laughs from the audience.

Johnson was also booed when he asked why Barnes has “turned against America” in response to moderators’ invitation for the candidates to express what they find admirable about their opponent.

Wisconsin is one among a handful of battleground state where Democrats hope to flip Senate seat in their push for a larger majority in the upper chamber.

Jake Spence, Wisconsin state director of the Working Families Party, which is supporting Barnes, said in a statement late Thursday that the final debate offered “a glimpse into Ron Johnson’s America — an America where there’s no minimum wage, where no one has access to abortions, where violent insurrectionists are protected by law, while Americans dependent on Social Security and Medicare are tossed aside.”

“Trump Republicans like Johnson are good at just two things: restricting freedoms, and raking in millions of dollars for himself and his donors at the expense of working families,” Spence added.