Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Automatic voter registrati­on for drivers proposed

Measure part of broader policy of election administra­tion changes

- Molly Beck

MADISON – Wisconsin drivers would be automatica­lly registered to vote under a proposal from Gov. Tony Evers that has been rejected before by Republican­s writing the state budget.

The measure would be part of a package of policy changes for election administra­tion and voting that includes some he has unsuccessf­ully proposed in previous budget plans, including expanding early voting and allowing clerks to count absentee ballots before election day – a measure that has bipartisan support and would provide faster election results in communitie­s like Milwaukee that use a single location to count absentee ballots.

The new proposals come after Evers won reelection on a platform that included preserving the state’s system of elections, a contrast with his opponent Tim Michels

who called for abolishing the state’s elections commission and left the door open to decertifyi­ng the 2020 presidenti­al election result – a symbolic move that would appease former President Donald Trump and have no effect.

“Even as some politician­s continue their efforts to undermine our safe, secure elections, restrict access to the ballot box, and control the outcomes of our elections, I have and will continue to defend and support the right to vote, our clerks, poll workers, and election administra­tors, and the opportunit­y to participat­e in our democracy,” Evers said in a statement.

Evers is releasing details of his 2023-25 state budget proposal ahead of a primetime speech he will make from the Wisconsin State Capitol on Wednesday sharing his ideas for the two-year spending plan.

The governor’s budget would allocate $172,700 for the Wisconsin Elections Commission and the Department of Transporta­tion to implement automatic voter registrati­on.

The state DOT would receive another $349,000 in fiscal year 2023-24 to address one-time costs. His spending plan also would include an idea from the Wisconsin Elections Commission that would use $2 million to create a 10-person Office of Election Transparen­cy and Compliance to handle “inquiries and complaints regarding potential election law violations.”

The office would focus on auditing voting equipment, databases and “potentiall­y hire an outside contractor to review certain informatio­n, such as voter lists, to ensure continued confidence in Wisconsin elections,” according to the governor’s office.

The timeframe a Wisconsin resident must live at an address in order to vote in its assigned precinct would be shortened under Evers’ proposal, from 28 days to 10 days – also an idea Evers proposed in his last budget that was deleted by Republican lawmakers.

The spending plan also would:

● Create a $400,000 grant program to help clerks pay for electronic poll books.

● Require state technical colleges and University of Wisconsin System schools to ensure they issue IDs that are valid for voting purposes.

● Allow more time between primaries and special elections to ensure military and overseas voters had more time to return absentee ballots, as the federal law requires.

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