The Badger Herald was founded in 1969 by a group of four students seeking a
conservative alternative to the UW–Madison's primary student newspaper,
The Daily Cardinal, which editorialized
against the Vietnam War and had close ties to leaders of the radical campus protest movement. When anti-war activists
detonated a truck bomb outside the university's Army Math Research Center on August 24, 1970, damaging several campus buildings and killing a post doc physics researcher,
The Daily Cardinal editorially supported the bombers, saying "If Robert Fassnacht had died in Vietnam ... he would be a line in a news story – a number. And that is the reality that some of us have already died to change will struggle to change." While such attitudes were widespread on college campuses at the time, the Daily Cardinal—along with other college newspapers—helped coordinate and encourage activism against military research. The Daily Cardinal would later become more moderate in response to pressure from local media, the UW Board of Regents, staff members leaving, declining advertising revenue, and the radicalism of the 1960s and early 1970s dying down around the country. Still,
The Badger Herald formed in direct response to the then-radicalism of
The Daily Cardinal and the campus. After several months of fund-raising, scrounging for desks and typewriters, and renting a walk-up office two blocks from the university's Bascom Hill at 538 State Street, the first issue of
The Badger Herald was published on September 10, 1969. In the late 1970s, the
Herald moved to 550 State Street. When the
Herald moved to its office at 326 W. Gorham Street in 1998, the editors kept much of the furniture, including the original desks and homemade light board. Their offices are currently located 152 W. Johnson St. Suite 202. Founding editor Patrick S. Korten received financial support for the new paper from nationally known conservative writer
William F. Buckley after it ran into financial trouble in 1971. Buckley raised money for the struggling paper by giving a fund-raising dinner speech in Madison, with proceeds going to the paper. It is the only speech Buckley ever gave free of charge. During the 1970s the paper remained solvent through advertising sales to businesses on the populous UW campus. The
Herald has consistently refused offers of a subsidy from the university in order to maintain its
editorial independence. During that era, the paper maintained a consistently conservative editorial policy - one that has since been abandoned - on a campus that was considered so liberal that it was called "The Berkeley of the Midwest". The paper received regional attention and sparked a series of campus protests in 1976 and 1978 by publishing controversial opinion pieces titled, "Mao, Death of a Tyrant", "Top Commie Bites Dust", "Can Africans Rule Themselves?" and "Confronting the Lavender Menace or: The Case Against Homosexuality". The
Herald was the first newspaper in the state of Wisconsin to publish the work of
Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist,
Jeff MacNelly, having signed the exclusive area rights from his syndicate in 1976.
The Badger Herald was first published as a weekly newspaper, went twice-weekly in 1974 and went daily in 1987. When the paper moved from weekly to daily, "its executive board calmed the editorial page's conservative voice," bringing it generally into line with the left-of-center political stance of
The Daily Cardinal. In 2005, the short-lived
Mendota Beacon attempted to fill the void left by the Herald's leftward shift by providing a conservative voice on campus. On February 13, 2006
The Badger Herald editorial board published a
controversial cartoon that depicted
Muhammad. In the accompanying column titled "Sacred Images, Sacred Rights", the board said it considered the cartoon "offensive" but also deemed it "clearly newsworthy" and a "vehicle of facilitation in the grand marketplace of ideas". In May 2008, a controversial cartoon of
David Horowitz, originally published in the
University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee school newspaper, the
UW–M Post, that depicted the conservative writer who is of Jewish-American heritage with a hooked nose, was republished on the front page of
The Badger Herald. The coverage of this article, that was accompanied by the controversial cartoon, followed the pattern of ''The Herald's'' decision to reprint images considered taboo. In February 2010, the
Herald accepted a text ad on its website from Bradley Smith with the Committee for Open Debate on the Holocaust, a
Holocaust denial organization. The
Herald Editor in Chief at the time, Jason Smathers, defended the decision based on the belief that the community was strong enough to see and reject the ad. After a strong push back from the university community, of which at least 25 percent is Jewish, the newspaper said it regretted the pain the decision caused but ultimately kept the ad up for the entirety of its month-long run. In March 2010, the
United States Holocaust Museum used the newspaper's decision in a form letter soliciting donations from members. In 2013,
The Badger Herald became an "online-first" publication, with print editions twice weekly. In 2015, the paper announced it would cut down its print editions to a weekly tabloid product. Then, during COVID-19, the paper further reduced their print editions to once per month on paper and once per week online. In 2024, The Herald gained recognition from its coverage of student protests against the war in Gaza. Much of the staff dedicated their days and nights to providing almost 16 hours per day of live coverage, according to the Herald. ==Comics==