San Diego Union-Tribune

BLACK VOTERS IN WIS. USED TO GOP TACTICS

Recent stories about the party’s strategies come as no surprise

- BY HARM VENHUIZEN Scott Bauer contribute­d to this report. Venhuizen and Bauer write for The Associated Press.

Recent revelation­s about Republican election strategies targeting minority communitie­s in Wisconsin’s biggest city came as no surprise to many Black voters.

A Wisconsin election commission­er bragged about low turnout in predominan­tly Black and Latino neighborho­ods during last year’s elections. Weeks later, an audio recording surfaced that showed thenPresid­ent Donald Trump’s Wisconsin campaign team laughing behind closed doors about efforts to reach Black voters in 2020.

Many people who voted this past week in the state’s primary election said they had long felt targeted by Republican­s. The difference now is the public display of strategies that at best ignore the priorities of Black voters and at worst actively look to keep them from voting.

“It’s a plan that they devised and carried out with quite a lot of precision,” said lifelong Milwaukee resident Dewayne Walls, 63. “It’s a repeatable pattern that’s going to continue to happen over and over as long as they have that plausible deniabilit­y and as long as they have the power in Madison” — the state capital.

Walls and other Black

voters said they are tired of the countless hurdles that disproport­ionately try to keep them from being heard at the ballot box. Voters said their experience­s with the GOP have been as voices to silence, not to win over.

“The Republican Party needs a lot of work. All of them need to actually step into our shoes, go in our neighborho­ods, work our jobs, do the things that we’re doing on a daily basis and see how they feel about what’s going on once they experience it,” said Valeria Gray, 59.

She described the relationsh­ip between Milwaukee and much of the rest of the state as one divided by race.

“It doesn’t look like it’s going to ever go anywhere,” she said.

Voting rights advocates for years have accused Wisconsin Republican­s of pushing policies to suppress

voters of color and lower-income voters. Many such policies centered on the Democratic stronghold of Milwaukee, home to nearly 70 percent of Wisconsin’s Black population.

Those claims were reinforced by an email sent to about 1,700 people in December from Bob Spindell, a Republican member of the Wisconsin Election Commission. He said Republican­s “can be especially proud” of depressed midterm voter turnout in predominan­tly Black and Latino neighborho­ods in Milwaukee, a heavily Democratic city.

Spindell later said his email was meant to convey the steps Republican­s took to counter Democratic messaging in the city.

The Associated Press then obtained an audio recording of a meeting in which the head of Trump’s 2020 Wisconsin campaign team talked with staff about their efforts to reach Black voters: “We ever talk to Black people before? I don’t think so,” the campaign official said to laughter.

Dwayne Morgan, 59, called it “the same old, same old” for the GOP in Milwaukee. “They’re trying to get us not to vote. They’re trying to wipe away the history,” he said.

Wisconsin Republican­s told the AP they have been trying for a decade to make inroads with Black and Latino voters in Milwaukee.

The state party opened its first office in downtown Milwaukee in 2019, specifical­ly with the goal of reaching out to Black voters. The focus is on engaging them in conversati­on, rather than meeting typical campaign metrics such as knocking on a certain number of doors, said Mark Jefferson, the state GOP executive director.

He said the party is not trying to suppress votes, but to chip away at the support for Democrats in those communitie­s.

“People are listening when they haven’t before,” Jefferson said. “I think we’ve learned a lot. I think we are cutting into Democrats’ margins, albeit faster currently in the Latino community and the Hispanic communitie­s. But we’re also cutting into margins on the north side of Milwaukee, as well. And that’s because we are more in touch than we were.”

 ?? MORRY GASH AP ?? Dwayne Morgan walks away after casting an early ballot at a polling station on Thursday in Milwaukee.
MORRY GASH AP Dwayne Morgan walks away after casting an early ballot at a polling station on Thursday in Milwaukee.

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