Friday, March 29, 2024
33.0°F

Wisconsin panel to give final approval on absentee ballots

by Associated Press
| June 17, 2020 11:30 AM

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — The Wisconsin Elections Commission was scheduled to give final approval Wednesday to a mailing that will put absentee ballot application forms in the hands of 2.7 million registered voters ahead of the November presidential election.

The commission, split evenly among Republicans and Democrats, previously voted unanimously in favor of sending the mailing to about 80% of registered voters. But they have not yet approved the letter that will accompany it. The mailing is in anticipation of a surge of absentee voting in the fall due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The Wisconsin mailing, to be sent by Sept. 1, would include the absentee ballot application form, not actual ballots. To receive a ballot, the voter must return the completed form with a copy of their photo ID.

The letter up for approval Wednesday contains information on how to request a ballot online; legal requirements for absentee voting; how to use the MyVote Wisconsin website; as well as in-person voting options.

Absentee voting surged in Wisconsin’s April 7 presidential primary and spring election, with nearly 1.2 million absentee ballots cast, or 74% of the total. State officials estimate that as many as 1.8 million voters could request absentee ballots for the November election, further straining state and local election officials.

The state has 3.4 million registered voters. About 528,000 have already requested absentees, and the state estimates about 158,000 have moved since they last voted, leaving about 2.7 million people to be mailed absentee applications.

The $2.2 million cost of the mailing will be paid for with a portion of Wisconsin's $7.3 million in federal funding to help with elections due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Democrats in Wisconsin and nationally have advocated for more mail-in voting as a way to reduce the risk of catching COVID-19 from voting in person. Republicans have opposed expanding mail-in voting.

President Donald Trump, who won Wisconsin by fewer than 23,000 votes in 2016, threatened to pull funding from states that have moved aggressively to get absentee ballots to all voters. Trump has claimed, without evidence, that mail-in voting leads to “total election fraud.” His GOP allies, meanwhile, have fought changes to voting in court and opposed funding to expand mail-in voting in Congress.

Republican Wisconsin state Rep. Rick Gundrum, of Slinger, circulated a letter to lawmakers on Tuesday urging the commission not to send the ballot application forms to voters who did not request it.

The elections commission was also to consider a request to enact a rule prohibiting the practice of ballot harvesting. That is the process by which outside groups, typically partisan, help to send or return large numbers of absentee ballots.

The Legislature last year refused to specifically outlaw ballot harvesting in state law. If the commission doesn't take action, the conservative Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty is expected to file a lawsuit. That's the group that asked for the rule to be enacted.

Twenty-seven states allow voters to designate someone else to return their ballot, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Wisconsin is one of 13 states that is silent on the issue, according to NCSL.

Elections commission staff said last year that it was not aware of any efforts in Wisconsin by a political campaign or organization to systematically collect absentee ballots.

___

Follow Scott Bauer on Twitter: https://twitter.com/sbauerAP