The Columbus Dispatch

Trump campaign seeks recount in Milwaukee and Dane counties

- Molly Beck and Patrick Marley

MADISON, Wisc. – President Donald Trump is seeking a recount of ballots in Dane and Milwaukee counties, hoping to overturn the state election results in his favor despite those voters choosing President-elect Joe Biden by wide margins.

Trump’s campaign paid the state $3 million and filed a petition for the partial recount on Wednesday, according to the Wisconsin Elections Commission.

Former Dane County Circuit Judge Jim Troupis is representi­ng the campaign in its recount effort.

“We will not stop fighting for transparen­cy and integrity in our electoral process to ensure that all Americans can trust the results of a free and fair election in Wisconsin and across the country,” said a statement from Troupis, who has long been active in Republican politics.

Trump would have had to pay nearly $8 million to conduct a full statewide recount of Wisconsin, a state he narrowly lost two weeks ago by nearly 21,000 votes. But state laws allow a more targeted approach to be used.

The official canvass of votes in the Nov. 3 election showed a 20,608 vote difference between Trump and Biden.

A change of that many votes in a recount – especially a partial one – is considered a longshot at best. But the recount gives Trump the opportunit­y to pursue legal challenges that he could try to use to throw out large numbers of ballots.

To win the presidency, Trump would also need to turn other states in his favor. A state-ordered recount is already underway in Georgia.

The petition, signed by Trump and Vice President Mike Pence on Monday, alleges “mistakes and fraud” were committed all over Wisconsin but particular­ly in Madison and Milwaukee, cities with large numbers of voters for Biden. The petition does not provide specific examples of mistakes or fraud.

Trump claims his campaign’s observers at Milwaukee’s central counting facility were required to stay 30 to 35 feet away from tables where ballots were being counted and that once his observers are closer to the counting, mistakes and fraud will be found.

“No, no, that’s not why they were chosen,” Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett said of the counties chosen for recounts. “They were chosen because they are the two counties that have a very high percentage of Democratic voters. That’s 100% why they were chosen.

“Everybody knows that.”

A recount in Milwaukee County is estimated to cost about $2 million, according to the state Elections Commission. Dane County would cost about $740,000.

In Milwaukee County, Biden beat Trump 317,270 votes to 134,357, according to the final canvass. The county canvass added 19 votes for Biden and 2 for Trump compared to the unofficial results.

In Dane County, Biden beat Trump 260,185 to 78,800. The county canvass added 28 votes for Biden and 11 votes for Trump.

Together, Dane and Milwaukee counties represent more than third (35%) of Biden’s statewide vote.

The recount would give the Trump campaign a chance to raise issues that Republican­s have groused about in recent weeks.

In his recount request, Trump argued he wanted to throw out absentee ballots in cases where clerks filled in the addresses of witnesses, a practice that clerks have engaged in for four years. He also wants to toss ballots from voters who called themselves indefinitely confined if they do not actually meet that definition. Indefinitely confined voters do not have to provide a copy of an ID to get an absentee ballot, as other voters must.

In his farthest-reaching request, Trump asked to discount the votes of those who did not submit a written applicatio­n for an absentee ballot – including for those who voted early in person during the two weeks before Election Day.

That would invalidate more than 60,000 votes in Milwaukee County alone, according to the Trump campaign.

Democrats said they were confident the outcome in Wisconsin would not change.

“The official canvass results reaffirmed Joe Biden’s clear and resounding win in Wisconsin after Wisconsin voters turned out to cast their ballots in record numbers. A cherry-picked and selective recounting of Milwaukee and Dane County will not change these results,” Biden spokesman Nate Evans said in a statement.

Dane County Clerk Scott Mcdonell said he expected Biden to pick up votes in a recount in his heavily Democratic county.

Sometimes votes that aren’t counted on Election Day get added to the totals in a recount, such as when someone voted for a candidate and also wrote in that same candidate’s name on the ballot, he said. In that case, a counting machine might reject the ballot on Election Day because it would see it as two votes for the same office, but it might get counted in a recount because poll workers would be able to ascertain the voter’s intent.

Mcdonell said he has not seen any major problems with the election.

“This was a really clean election from our point of view,” he said.

Francesca Hong of Madison, a Democrat who was recently elected to the state Assembly, said seeking a recount in the counties with the majority of the state’s Black residents is “the most blatant and racist form of voter suppressio­n.”

“For the WI GOP to continue congratula­ting and thanking 45 is sickening,” Hong tweeted about Wisconsin Republican­s’ continued support of Trump’s efforts to cast doubt on the election system. “There will be no evidence of voter fraud only voter suppressio­n.”

The push for a recount comes as Republican­s who control the Legislatur­e have promised to conduct their own review of the election. They have talked of issuing subpoenas for the first time in decades to bring clerks before legislativ­e committees, even though clerks have said they are willing to appear without a subpoena.

Legislator­s said they hoped to hold a hearing this week but so far haven’t scheduled one.

Incoming Senate President Chris Kapenga of Delafield on Wednesday told WDJT-TV that Republican­s were looking at bringing in auditors to assist wi

Pandemic increases cost of recount

Milwaukee County Clerk George Christenso­n on Wednesday told the Journal Sentinel that the county is ready to perform a recount at the Wisconsin Center, which offers enough room for social distancing.

The county’s plan is to set up on Thursday, assuming the Wisconsin Elections Commission orders a recount after it meets at 6 p.m. Wednesday.

Christenso­n said the recount would take 300 to 400 poll workers and staff to perform, and the building would be prepared to handle observers as well.

The county hopes to finish the recount before Dec. 1, the day the state is slated to certify the vote total, Christenso­n said.

Christenso­n said each municipali­ty is responsibl­e for conducting the recount for their reporting units and as far as he is aware the municipali­ties are prepared with enough poll workers.

Ballots cast on Nov. 3 will again be counted by machines that tally votes.

“We will be ready to proceed as safely and as efficiently as possible,” Christenso­n said minutes before the Trump campaign announced the county would be one of the places it would seek a recount.

Dane County’s recount will be conducted at the Monona Terrace convention center and will be livestream­ed, Mcdonell said. It will start Friday and will likely take until Dec. 1, he said.

Alison Dirr and Craig Gilbert of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel contribute­d to this report.

 ?? MIKE DE SISTI/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? President Donald Trump dances to “YMCA” after he spoke at a campaign rally at Kenosha Regional Airport.
MIKE DE SISTI/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL President Donald Trump dances to “YMCA” after he spoke at a campaign rally at Kenosha Regional Airport.

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