Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Walker calls 2 elections; Senate drops legislatio­n

Seats in state Senate, Assembly have been empty since December

- Jason Stein

MADISON - After a three-month delay, a lightning-quick lawsuit and three orders from as many judges, Wisconsin

Gov. Scott Walker called two special elections Thursday and GOP senators dropped legislatio­n to block the contests.

Republican efforts collapsed following a Wednesday ruling by an appellate judge ordering the governor to call the May primary and June general elections. In less than a day, Walker abandoned a state Supreme Court appeal to overturn the ruling and lawmakers in both the Senate and Assembly canceled plans to vote to leave the seats vacant.

“This is a victory for the citizens of Wisconsin who are without representa­tion because of Governor Walker’s refusal to do his job,” said former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, whose national Democratic group brought the lawsuit against Walker on behalf of local voters. “Republican­s in the Legislatur­e should stop

trying to find new ways to keep the people they’re supposed to represent from voting.”

Less than an hour after Walker called the special election, Door County Economic Developmen­t Corp. Executive Director Caleb Frostman announced he would run as a Democrat in one of the open seats. The 1st Senate District includes Door and Kewaunee counties and parts of Brown, Manitowoc and Calumet counties.

Later in the day, two De Pere Republican­s also announced runs for the seat in the fall — state Rep. Andre Jacque and Alex Renard, who helps manage a family factory, Renco Machine Co.

In the 42nd Assembly District in mainly Columbia and Dodge counties, three Democrats — Lodi city council member Ann Groves Lloyd, Tyler Raley of Rio and Air Force veteran George Ferriter of Doylestown — are running against small business owner and Town of Lodi board member Jon Plumer. So far, only Groves Lloyd has officially filed in the special election though the others still could.

Assembly Majority Leader Jim Steineke said his house was canceling an April 4 vote on the special elections bill and had “no further plans” to meet this year. Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald (R-Juneau) also dropped the legislatio­n Thursday.

Republican­s like Walker and U.S. Senate candidate Leah Vukmir said Thursday that the courts had gotten it wrong.

“The court’s demand for an election now when both seats will also be on the November ballot is unnecessar­y and duplicativ­e. Once again, all logical thought processes fail to exist, and the taxpayers are on the hook,” Vukmir campaign spokesman Mattias Gugel said in a statement.

The Journal Sentinel has reported that among Senate GOP colleagues Vukmir privately criticized the bill to halt the special elections. Vukmir, who later voted in a committee to bring the legislatio­n forward, has not responded to questions about her private comments.

Democrats point out that Walker could have called the special elections in December when Sen. Frank Lasee (R-De Pere) and Rep. Keith Ripp (R-Lodi) stepped down to take jobs in his administra­tion. That would have avoided such a tight timeline and potentiall­y saved money by allowing the general election to be held alongside Tuesday’s spring election.

Walker didn’t call for special elections to fill those seats despite a law that requires them to be held promptly. Holder’s group, the National Democratic Redistrict­ing Committee, then filed a lawsuit and won last week in Dane County Circuit Court, prompting Walker’s appeal.

A spokesman for the redistrict­ing committee had no immediate comment on whether the group would seek to win payment of its undisclose­d attorney’s fees and other costs from the state.

Separately, GOP lawmakers sought to pass their legislatio­n that would invalidate any court order or special election call from Walker and render the issue moot.

On Wednesday, District 2 Court of Appeals Judge Paul Reilly in Waukesha left in place the lower court order that the governor call the elections, rejecting Walker’s arguments that he needed an extra eight days to let the Legislatur­e change the law and eliminate the need for the elections.

Walker and attorneys in GOP Attorney General Brad Schimel’s office told the state Supreme Court Wednesday that they were likely to file their second emergency appeal to the state’s highest judicial panel. But hours later, they told the court they would not appeal.

Fitzgerald said holding the elections could make it difficult for roughly 100 soldiers and other overseas voters to cast ballots. But Fitzgerald said canceling the election after Walker called it would be too much.

Fitzgerald said the Senate might still return to pass legislatio­n to save two paper plants from closure if state officials reach a deal with Kimberly-Clark Corp., the owner of the factories.

Democrats have pointed out that Senate Republican­s didn’t push legislatio­n to protect military voters until after the first judge’s order on the special election. Fitzgerald has said he didn’t do so before because the issue wasn’t “on his radar screen.”

Senate Minority Leader Jennifer Shilling (D-La Crosse) said that in a democracy “nothing is more fundamenta­l” than the right to vote.

“Despite Governor Walker’s best attempts to block elections and deny 200,000 voters their constituti­onal right to representa­tion, justice prevailed and the courts correctly ruled that Republican­s can’t ignore the law,” she said in a statement.

Walker ordered the special elections for the First Senate District and 42nd Assembly District to be held June 12. Any primaries needed will be May 15.

Circulatio­n of nomination papers for candidates can begin immediatel­y. Nomination papers must be filed no later than 5 p.m. April 17.

“The court’s demand for an election now when both seats will also be on the November ballot is unnecessar­y and duplicativ­e. Once again, all logical thought processes fail to exist, and the taxpayers are on the hook.” Mattias Gugel, spokesman for Republican U.S. Senate candidate Leah Vukmir

“Despite Governor Walker’s best attempts to block elections and deny 200,000 voters their constituti­onal right to representa­tion, justice prevailed and the courts correctly ruled that Republican­s can’t ignore the law.” Senate Minority Leader Jennifer Shilling (D-La Crosse)

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