Miami Herald

Despite virus, Wisconsin holds in-person voting

- BY SCOTT BAUER AND STEVE PEOPLES Associated Press

Despite federal health recommenda­tions, thousands of Wisconsin voters waited hours in long lines outside overcrowde­d polling stations on Tuesday so they could participat­e in a presidenti­al primary election that tested the limits of electoral politics in the midst of a pandemic.

Thousands more stayed home, unwilling to risk their health even as Republican officials pushed forward with the election amid a stay-athome order. But many of the potential voters who remained in their homes complained that the absentee ballots that they had requested never showed up.

Pregnant and infected with the coronaviru­s, 34year-old Hannah Gleeson was still waiting Tuesday for the absentee ballot that she requested last week.

“It seems really unfair and undemocrat­ic and unconstitu­tional,” said Gleeson, who works at an assisted-living center in Milwaukee. “I think it’s voter suppressio­n at its finest.”

Polls began closing Tuesday night, but a court ruling appeared to prevent results from being made public earlier than next Monday.

Joe Biden hopes the state will help deliver a knockout blow to Bernie Sanders in the nomination fight, but the winner might be less significan­t than Wisconsin’s decision to allow voting. Its ability to host an election during a pandemic could have significan­t implicatio­ns for other primaries and even the fall general election.

The chaos in a premiere general-election battlegrou­nd underscore­d the lengths to which the coronaviru­s outbreak has upended politics as Democrats seek a nominee to take on President Donald Trump. Democrats complained that the state was risking the health of its citizens by not postponing the election. Republican­s insisted that the election should go on as scheduled.

Milwaukee, the state’s largest city, operated just five of its 180 traditiona­l polling places, forced to downsize after hundreds of poll workers stepped down because of health risks. The resulting logjam forced voters to wait together in lines spanning several blocks in some cases. Many did not have facial coverings.

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