Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Candidate derides elderly voters

Hovde: Almost nobody in a nursing home is in a point to vote’

- Jessie Opoien

MADISON – Republican U.S. Senate candidate Eric Hovde drew national attention this week for suggesting most nursing home residents are not qualified to vote as he detailed his concerns with election administra­tion in Wisconsin.

A Hovde campaign spokesman on Tuesday said the candidate’s comments did not imply that elderly people should not vote.

“We had nursing homes where the sheriff of Racine investigat­ed, where you had 100% voting in nursing homes,” Hovde said, referring to the 2020 election, during a recent interview on the Guy Benson Show. “Well, if you’re in a nursing home, you only have five, six months life expectancy. Almost nobody in a nursing home is in a point to vote. And you have children, adult children showing up that said, who voted for my 85- or 90-year-old father or mother?”

How residents of Wisconsin nursing homes voted during the 2020 election became a central focus of Republican­s questionin­g the outcome of the presidenti­al contest, even though recounts, an independen­t audit and a report from a conservati­ve group all verify the result that Joe Biden defeated Donald Trump by more than 20,000 votes in the state.

“Between these comments and his promises to cut Social Security and raise the retirement age, Eric Hovde continues to show that he does not respect Wisconsini­tes, understand our struggles, or share our values,” said Andrew Mamo, spokesman for Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin’s campaign, in a statement.

Hovde has told reporters and radio hosts on multiple occasions that his campaign won’t relitigate the 2020 election and he does not believe it was stolen — but that changes are needed in order to restore confidence in elections.

“In no manner did Eric Hovde suggest that elderly people should not vote. He was referring to specific cases in Racine Co. where family members raised concerns about their loved ones voting,” said Hovde spokesman Ben Voelkel in a statement.

How did nursing homes become a contentiou­s election issue?

Voting in nursing homes during the pandemic emerged as a flashpoint in

Republican­s’ quest to overhaul how elections are conducted in Wisconsin as former President Donald Trump continues to falsely claim his 2020 loss was a product of widespread cheating.

State law requires municipal clerks to dispatch poll workers known as special voting deputies to nursing homes to assist residents with filling out ballots. The Wisconsin Elections Commission advised clerks to ignore that law in 2020 and send absentee ballots to nursing home residents because the facilities were not accepting visitors during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Outrage over that decision ramped up in October 2021 after Racine County Sheriff Christophe­r Schmaling issued a report saying that policy resulted in sloppy practice at the Ridgewood Care Center in Mount Pleasant. He questioned whether some residents should have voted and argued five of the six members of the commission should be charged with felonies.

Racine County District Attorney Patricia Hanson in February concluded she had no authority to charge the commission­ers. Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm also declined to charge two commission­ers living in his area, citing a lack of evidence showing a crime had been committed.

The commission­ers insisted they did not commit crimes and said they suggested the approach to ensure the right to vote was not infringed upon for the vulnerable adults.

The commission restored its guidance to again dispatch special voting deputies to nursing homes after the pandemic subsided in 2021.

Under state law, only a judge can declare a person ineligible to vote due to incompeten­cy. That decision is based on a determinat­ion of whether the person is “incapable of understand­ing the objective of the elective process.”

Why is Eric Hovde being asked about the 2020 election?

During a rally in Green Bay earlier this month, Trump offered Hovde his “complete and total endorsemen­t.”

“That’s a big race,” the former president told the crowd. “And we’ll be here to help.”

The endorsemen­t comes as Trump continues to repeat the lie that he won Wisconsin in 2020. In a radio interview Tuesday, he warned the state’s top election administra­tor “will try to steal another election” if she’s not removed before he and Biden face each other on the ballot again. He also accused Republican Assembly Speaker Robin Vos and Reince Priebus, Trump’s former chief of staff, of not doing enough to force out Wisconsin Elections Commission Administra­tor Meagan Wolfe.

Asked last week about Trump’s repeated lies, Hovde told reporters in Milwaukee, “I’m running in 2024. I’m running for the U.S. Senate. But I do say, we have to get confidence back in our election system.”

Hovde also argued that “a lot of people in the state feel President Biden is very divisive.”

“I will just say that the politics of division play out on both sides,” Hovde said.

What policy changes does Hovde support?

The Hovde campaign did not name any specific policy changes he believes would address his concerns with election administra­tion. But Hovde told reporters last week he is glad Wisconsin voters approved two constituti­onal amendments that prohibit clerks from using private grants to administer elections and add that only appointed election officials can perform tasks to conduct elections.

The two referendum questions on the April 2 ballot came from a proposal authored by Republican­s who continue to scrutinize millions of dollars in grants that helped Wisconsin clerks meet unexpected costs during the pandemic. Clerks used the money for personal protective equipment and drop boxes for absentee ballots, for example.

The grants, which were funded by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, and distribute­d by the Center for Tech and Civic Life, went to more than 200 communitie­s in Wisconsin, including Republican areas. But the bulk of the money went toward the state’s five largest cities, which Republican­s said drummed up turnout.

“If a big conservati­ve Republican came into the state and was targeting conservati­ve areas to push out the vote, let me tell you, liberals would be outraged by that,” Hovde told reporters last week.

“You had ballot harvesting in public places. … You had correction of votes,” Hovde said, referring to the collection of absentee ballots in public parks and the “curing” of absentee ballot envelopes missing parts of witnesses’ addresses. “All those things need to be cleaned up. It’s wrong. And if it was happening on the other side, people would be outraged. So let’s find a system to bring everybody’s confidence back into the election process.”

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