Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Billboards and ads offer help with voter ID law

- Patrick Marley

MADISON - Voting rights groups are launching an informatio­n blitz telling voters in poor neighborho­ods how to get IDs for voting and alerting felons they can vote if they’ve completed their sentences.

The campaign includes ads on buses in Milwaukee and Madison and billboards in neighborho­ods in those cities that have seen some of the steepest drop-offs in voting rates.

“Off paper? Free to vote,” says one billboard. “You have the right to vote in Wisconsin once you are off paper from a felony conviction.”

In Wisconsin, felons automatica­lly get their voting rights back when they are out of prison and finished with their probation or extended supervisio­n. In some other states, felons have far more difficulty in regaining the right to vote.

The voting rights groups are spending about $70,000 on the campaign, with Dane County putting another $45,000 in taxpayer money toward it.

The effort also includes mailers, radio ads and a door-to-door canvassing campaign.

“The right to vote belongs to all citizens equally, and by uniting with this community and its leaders, we’re working to make sure all eligible voters know this fundamenta­l right belongs to them and cannot be taken (away),” said Molly McGrath, director of the All Voting is Local campaign.

The campaign is a collaborat­ion of the American Civil Liberties Union, the Leadership Conference of Civil Rights, the Campaign Legal Center, the American Constituti­on Society and the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.

The ads and billboard alert voters that they can get free IDs from the state to vote. It tells them to call (608) 2852141, where they can leave a voice mes-

sage with questions that the groups say they will answer within 48 hours.

The billboards are being targeted in places where voting has dropped off in recent elections.

The voting rights groups blame the 2011 voter ID law for those turnout reductions — a claim Republican­s who passed the law dispute.

The American Civil Liberties Union with others has sued the state over the voter ID law. Courts have upheld the requiremen­t to show IDs at the polls but have ordered the state to make it easier for people to get free IDs if they don’t have birth certificat­es or other documents proving their identity.

The ACLU’s lawsuit, along with one challengin­g other voting laws brought by other groups, remains before the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago.

The voting rights groups contend the state hasn’t done enough to tell people about how to get IDs and what the requiremen­ts are for voting. Their informatio­n campaign is aimed at helping people vote if they don’t have what they need to cast a ballot.

Dane County Clerk Scott McDonell said his heavily Democratic county is helping to fund the effort because officials there want to make sure everyone knows their rights. He said the billboards will be placed in neighborho­ods with high minority population­s.

He said he thought the ad campaign was essential because many voters don’t know all the details of the voter ID law, such as that the address on a driver’s license does not have to be current to be valid for voting.

“Voter confusion is a real problem,” he said.

Neil Albrecht, executive director of the Milwaukee Election Commission, said he thought the effort would help boost turnout. In Milwaukee in 2016, turnout dropped by 12% compared with 2012, with much larger dropouts in the most economical­ly distressed neighborho­ods, Albrecht said.

“Any and all public informatio­n that gets out to residents of the city is good for the city,” he said.

 ?? SUBMITTED ?? The All Voting is Local campaign is placing billboards in Milwaukee. The images will also be used in digital ads.
SUBMITTED The All Voting is Local campaign is placing billboards in Milwaukee. The images will also be used in digital ads.

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