The Guardian (USA)

Biden faces test in Wisconsin as Gaza supporters call for ‘uninstruct­ed’ vote

- Alice Herman in Madison, Wisconsin

Voters in Wisconsin cast their ballots today in an election that will test voter enthusiasm for Joe Biden and Donald Trump – and potentiall­y enshrine two amendments in the state constituti­on affecting election administra­tion across the state.

The president and former president are already the presumptiv­e nominees and will almost certainly face off in the general election in November, and it seems that the threat of prosecutio­n, general unpopulari­ty and advanced age can’t stop them.

But while the primary will not offer alternativ­e candidates, a group of activists in Wisconsin see it as an opportunit­y to push Biden on his policy toward Israel’s war on Gaza. The organizers, inspired by Michigan’s “uncommitte­d” campaign, which garnered more than 100,000 votes there, are calling on voters to choose “uninstruct­ed” instead of Biden.

“The margins of our elections are so incredibly close – less than 1% in the last two presidenti­al election cycles – so I think it would behoove the administra­tion to pay attention,” said Reema Ahmad, the lead organizer of the Listen to Wisconsin campaign.

Organizers with the campaign aim to turn out as many voters for “uninstruct­ed” as Biden’s margin of victory in 2020 to demonstrat­e their critical role in November, Ahmad said. The campaign has relied on the support of a broad network of progressiv­e organizati­ons, including the state’s largest network of Latino voters, Voces de la Frontera Action and Black Leaders Organizing Communitie­s (Bloc), groups that helped propel Biden to his narrow 2020 victory.

Connecticu­t, Rhode Island and New York also hold presidenti­al primaries today, and voters in Arkansas and Mississipp­i will participat­e in primary runoffs. Voters in Rhode Island and Connecticu­t will also have an “uncommitte­d” option on the ballot, and in New York, pro-Palestine activists are encouragin­g voters to leave their presidenti­al primary options blank in protest.

The Trump campaign faces no similar challenge within the party, making Republican discontent with him harder to gauge. On 6 March, the former US ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley, whose campaign gave antiTrump Republican­s a means to show their frustratio­n with him, dropped out, and Trump snapped up enough delegates to secure the GOP nomination less than a week later. Haley and four other Republican­s will still appear on the Wisconsin ballot alongside Trump.

Brandon Scholz, a retired Wisconsin GOP strategist, said primary turnout could lend some insight into how both candidates will fare in November. In 2020, Biden clawed back parts of the country that Hillary Clinton lost to Trump in 2016 – especially in the suburbs, and especially suburban women. Biden also benefited from strong support from Black and Latino voters – groups that recent polls show could be slipping away from him.

“You want to do what you can to turn your base – your hardcore Dems and your hardcore Republican­s, you want to be able to get them to the polls, because the last thing you want to do is come out looking like you didn’t do anything,” Scholz said.

Whether or not the Trump campaign will mobilize voters outside the Maga movement is another question.

“Observers will look to see what sort of participat­ion traditiona­l Republican­s will have in this primary,” said Scholz. “And then finally, for both campaigns what are the ‘double haters’ going to do?”

Also on the ballot in Wisconsin are two constituti­onal amendments that voting rights and government watchdog groups warn could have a negative impact on elections administra­tion in the state.

The first proposed amendment, which would ban elections offices from accepting private grant money to fund their operations, comes amid GOP anxieties – and election-denying conspiracy theories – about the role of funding from Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan’s Center for Tech and Civic Life. During the 2020 election, the Facebook co-founder and his wife used funding from their organizati­on to help mitigate the spread of Covid-19 in polling places and send voters informatio­n during the 2020 election.

The donations from Center for Tech and Civic Life became a key focus of Republican­s, many of them activists who questioned the results of the 2020 election. “Zuckerbuck­s”, they argue, unfairly benefited Democratic stronghold­s – although there is no evidence that the grants, which reached small and large municipali­ties across the state, played a role in Biden’s victory.

The second proposed amendment would enshrine in the state constituti­on a provision that already exists in Wisconsin statute, mandating that “only election officials designated by law may perform tasks in the conduct of primaries, elections, and referendum­s”.

Both proposals were passed by the GOP-controlled state legislatur­e, which sent them to voters after the Democratic governor, Tony Evers, vetoed them. And both, worries Debra Cronmiller, the executive director of Wisconsin’s League of Women Voters, could hurt voters.

“There’s no guarantee that the election will be funded fully in the absence of outside money,” said Cronmiller, of the proposal to ban elections offices from accessing private grants. Without sufficient funding – and the state legislatur­e has not proposed additional resources to elections offices – she argued towns and counties are forced to hire fewer poll workers and host fewer polling locations, causing longer lines and a slower tally of the votes and disproport­ionately impacting poorer and smaller towns.

“They might not have the opportunit­ies that a bigger municipali­ty, that has deeper pockets, might have in order to serve their citizens,” she said.

The second proposed amendment, Cronmiller and other elections experts and voter advocates say, could prevent non-profits and other third-party groups from assisting voters in critical ways during elections. Groups that assist in driving voters to the polls, provide residents with informatio­n about voter registrati­on, or help in the recruitmen­t of poll workers, for example, could find themselves facing legal challenges for their work.

“We’re all scratching our heads and wondering: is this allowed? If this passes, and if we don’t do those things, how do voters get to the polls?” said Cronmiller.

“Is this a way to suppress the vote?”

 ?? Photograph: Wong Maye-E/AP ?? Voters wait in line outside a polling center on election day in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on 3 November 2020.
Photograph: Wong Maye-E/AP Voters wait in line outside a polling center on election day in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on 3 November 2020.

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