Evers lights ‘Learning Tree’ with students and teachers at the Capitol

Gov. Tony Evers joined teachers and students from across Wisconsin to light the Wisconsin Holiday Tree in the Capitol Thursday. (Photo by Baylor Spears/Wisconsin Examiner)
Gov. Tony Evers joined teachers and students from across Wisconsin to light the Wisconsin Holiday Tree in the Capitol Thursday. Evers, who previously worked as a science teacher and principal and served as state schools superintendent before he was elected governor, said the tree this year is special because of students’ participation.

The theme for this year is “the Learning Tree,” with ornaments made by students at public and private schools across the state.
“We encouraged them to think about what learning means to them, and we encouraged them to reflect on all the people who made learning possible and fun,” Evers said. “The librarian who helped them find a new favorite book. The school nurse who helped them when they weren’t feeling well. The school bus driver who gets them [to school] and gets them home safely. The teacher who helped them learn something they really didn’t think they could learn, and so many others who played a role in helping our kids bring the best and fullest selves to the classroom every day.”
The students’ handmade ornaments decorate a 30-foot balsam fir donated by Dave and Mary Vander Velden, the retired owners of Whispering Pines Tree Farm in Oconto County. It was harvested by Henry Schienebeck and members of the Great Lakes Timber Professionals Association.
Ellie Mason, an eighth-grader from John Muir Middle School in Wausau, spoke about what the Learning Tree means to her and helped Evers flip the switch to turn the tree lights on.
“I picture a tree with many branches reaching out in every direction, each one helping me climb a little higher. The tree is strong with many branches, each one supporting the others,” Mason said. “That’s what school feels like to me.”
Mason said her mom and other members of her family are teachers, and they have shown her that being a teacher “means caring about people so much that you believe in what they become.” She thanked Wisconsin teachers, custodians, principals, nurses, cafeteria workers and office staff for all their hard work.
“You are the branches of the Learning Tree, lifting us up into helping us reach our whole potential,” Mason said.

Other speakers at the lighting included Rodney Esser, also known as “Mr. Peanuts,” who is the head custodian at Park Elementary School and has spent 60 years with the Middleton-Cross Plains Area School District, Green Bay West High School Teacher Ellie Hinz-Radue, and CEO and Executive Director of the Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority Elmer Moore Jr. The lighting also featured performances by the La Crosse Central High School band and four members of the Kids From Wisconsin, an audition show choir group made up of students from across the state.
Not everyone had a positive reaction to the “Learning Tree.” Republican gubernatorial hopefuls criticized Evers for not calling it a “Christmas tree.”
“They won’t even call it a “Christmas” tree. Time to replace woke nonsense with Wisconsin common sense in 2026,” U.S. Rep. Tom Tiffany said on social media. He tagged Lt. Gov. Sara Rodriguez, one of the Democratic gubernatorial hopefuls, in his post.
Washington County Executive Josh Schoemann wrote about the announcement of the tree theme on social media, saying “it’s a Christmas tree, Tony. I look forward to highlighting all our wonderful Wisconsin Christmas traditions as Governor, and having the best, biggest, most impressive CHRISTMAS TREE in the Capitol!”
Evers is not running for reelection next year.
The state under Evers’ leadership started referring to the tree in the Capitol as a holiday tree in 2019 to avoid perceptions that it was endorsing any religion. Each winter season since then has been marked by complaints from Republicans about ecumenical terminology for the time of year and traditions. In 2020, a pair of Republican lawmakers went so far as to set up their own tree in the Capitol rotunda in protest.
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