Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Mail-in election

State Sen. Chris Kapenga says an absentee-only vote is illegal. Is it?

- Haley BeMiller

Wisconsin’s pandemic election had some residents and officials searching for an alternativ­e to in-person voting to mitigate the spread of the coronaviru­s. A popular option: Mail-in voting. Gov. Tony Evers called the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e into a special session days before the April 7 election in an effort to convert it to mail only. Local leaders, including Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett and Green Bay Mayor Eric Genrich echoed that request.

As we know, it never happened, and in-person voting occurred despite public health concerns. But Wisconsin will hold two more statewide elections this year, plus a special election for the 7th Congressio­nal District seat on Tuesday. Could we do it then?

State Sen. Chris Kapenga, R-Delafield, broached the subject in an April 6 email to a constituen­t who wanted lawmakers to postpone the election and move it to mail. The constituen­t shared the email exchange with PolitiFact Wisconsin, wondering if it were true.

“Some have advocated for moving to an absentee only election or mailing every registered voter in the state a ballot,” Kapenga wrote. “Currently, this is illegal.”

Mail ballots

State Sen. Chris Kapenga

R-Delafield

The statement

Says it’s illegal to hold an absentee-only election or mail ballots to every registered voter

The verdict

The law is clear

Is it? Let’s see how Kapenga’s claim rates.

Wisconsin election law

When asked for evidence to support Kapenga’s claim, the senator’s office provided an analysis of state statute from the Wisconsin Legislativ­e Council. What does the law say? Wisconsin currently requires elections

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to be held at polling places — generally a public building — which means those sites need to be open for voting to some extent. Any voter can choose instead to request an absentee ballot and vote by mail, an option more than 1 million voters took advantage of on April 7.

A vote-by-mail election would also be at odds with Wisconsin’s long-standing policy of allowing same-day voter registrati­on at the polls.

But conducting an election entirely by mail would require a change to state statute. Even states like Washington that are billed as vote by mail still operate voting centers for people to cast ballots before and on election day.

“Some people with disabiliti­es need to use accessible voting equipment,” noted Reid Magney, spokesman for the Wisconsin Elections Commission.

State law also says that local clerks must receive a written applicatio­n from a voter to issue an absentee ballot, so they can’t simply send them to everyone. They can, however, legally mail ballot applicatio­ns to voters.

The City of Milwaukee took advantage of that allowance and is establishi­ng a program for the fall elections that will mail applicatio­ns and postage-paid return envelopes to voters, in an effort to prevent lines at polling places.

So, the law is clear: Wisconsin can’t hold an election entirely by mail or send ballots to registered voters.

But whether that remains true for August and November remains to be seen. Democrats have introduced legislatio­n that would move them primarily to mail, though some polling locations would be open for voters who have a disability or struggle to read, write or understand English.

Our ruling

Kapenga told a constituen­t that it’s currently illegal to hold an absenteeon­ly election or mail ballots to every registered voter.

State statute does prohibit both measures as currently written. Lawmakers could change that, but it’s unclear if or when that will happen.

We rate Kapenga’s claim True.

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