Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Evers vetoes string of GOP-backed election bills

Move comes days after Republican tries to seize ballots, voting machines

- Hope Karnopp and Patrick Marley Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

MADISON - Gov. Tony Evers vetoed election bills Tuesday that would have required Wisconsini­tes to fill out more paperwork to vote absentee and said county officials should refuse efforts from a Republican lawmaker to seize their ballots and voting machines.

Evers had long signaled he would veto the six measures, which he and other Democrats have said would make it harder for people to vote.

“In recent years, we (have been) used as a petri dish for Republican plans to undermine democracy. Well, not anymore. Not today. Not anymore today. Not as long as I’m governor of the great state of Wisconsin,” Evers said at a ceremony in the Capitol rotunda.

He vetoed the bills days after a Republican lawmaker attempted to seize ballots and voting machines in Brown and Milwaukee counties. Evers questioned the validity of subpoenas issued by Republican Rep. Janel Brandtjen of Menomonee Falls and said county election officials should refuse to comply with them.

“The answer would be hell no,” he told reporters.

Republican­s who control the Legislatur­e said the bills would have promoted confidence in elections. Only a handful of cases of potential voter fraud were identified following the November 2020 election.

“The governor just turned his back on important election integrity bills that, had he signed (them) would have gone a long way to prove to the people of Wisconsin that protecting the integrity of our elections matters more than appeasing progressiv­e Madison and Milwaukee special interest groups,” said a statement from state Senate President Chris Kapenga, R-Delafield.

The bills Evers vetoed would have required voters to fill out two forms instead of one to vote absentee, added restrictio­ns on who can return completed absentee ballots, required elderly and disabled voters to provide IDs to vote absentee in most cases and prohibited clerks from correcting defects on absentee ballot envelopes.

Other bills vetoed would have created a backup system for voting in nursing homes and required nursing home administra­tors to notify relatives when special voting deputies will visit the facility. Another would have allowed election observers to sit or stand within 3 feet of poll workers during recounts.

Another bill he vetoed would have required municipali­ties that livestream their counting of ballots to record it and save it for 22 months. Other election records must be retained for that amount of time.

Assembly Speaker Robin Vos of Rochester said the bills would have standardiz­ed voting procedures.

“While he claims these bills are ‘antidemocr­acy,’ his actions speak louder than words. He is satisfied with the status quo and refusing to improve future elections,” Vos said in a statement.

Evers in June vetoed a bill that would have prohibited counties and municipali­ties from applying for or accepting grants from private organizati­ons. Conservati­ves have pushed back against more than $10 million in grants to Wisconsin municipali­ties distribute­d by the Center for Tech and Civic Life. The center’s funding came from Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, and most of the money went to the state’s largest, liberal cities.

Vetoes come as conservati­ves demand broader election audit

The vetoes come as Republican­s conduct two reviews of the presidenti­al election. Recounts in Milwaukee and Dane counties and a string of court rulings confirmed Joe Biden narrowly defeated Donald Trump in Wisconsin.

One review is being conducted by the nonpartisa­n Legislativ­e Audit Bureau. The other is being overseen by former state Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman, who has claimed the election was stolen despite evidence showing it was conducted properly.

Some Republican­s are trying to go further. Brandtjen on Friday issued subpoenas as the chairwoman of the Assembly Elections Committee that she said would force Brown and Milwaukee counties to hand over their ballots, voting machines and other records and hardware.

Brandtjen is attempting to launch a review of ballots similar to one in Arizona that has sparked controvers­y. That review is being conducted by a firm named Cyber Ninjas that has never before examined election results.

Evers said seizing ballots and voting machines in the way Arizona did would make the election review “outrageous­ly invisible.” Recounts in Wisconsin can be observed by the public, but Arizona’s review included tight limits on who could visit the coliseum where ballots were being examined.

“You see what’s going on in Arizona. It’s a clown show,” Evers said, noting the Arizona review included a frequently mocked effort to search for bamboo fibers in ballots to check a baseless theory that ballots were smuggled into Arizona from Asia.

A memo from the nonpartisa­n Legislativ­e Council suggests Brandtjen’s subpoenas are invalid because they have not been signed by Vos or Assembly Chief Clerk Ted Blazel.

Brandtjen insisted in a news release Monday that she had the power to issue the subpoenas on her own.

Michael Maistelman, an attorney who frequently represents Democrats, disagreed and said Milwaukee County Clerk George Christenso­n should not abide by the subpoena he received.

Maistelman said he would tell Christenso­n that he should “tell Rep. Brandtjen to go pound sand and send her an invoice for wasting your time.”

Christenso­n said county attorneys were reviewing Brandtjen’s demand for documents.

Brandtjen’s efforts have drawn support from Republican Reps. Dave Murphy of Greenville and Timothy Ramthun of Campbellsp­ort.

Ramthun, who has invoked a theme from the QAnon conspiracy theory to promote the ballot review, said Friday in a Facebook video that he would be attending an election symposium in South Dakota hosted by MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell. Lindell has offered convoluted claims of election hacking that cybersecur­ity experts have called ludicrous.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States