The Guardian (USA)

Milwaukee replaces top election official six months before presidenti­al vote

- Sam Levine and Alice Herman in Madison, Wisconsin

Milwaukee will replace its top election official with just under six months until the presidenti­al election, the city’s mayor announced on Monday.

Mayor Cavalier Johnson appointed Paulina Gutiérrez to take over as executive director of the Milwaukee election commission, replacing Claire Woodall who had served as the director since July 2020.

The change, first reported by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, means there will be a new head of elections in one of the most critical cities in a key battlegrou­nd state. Milwaukee is the most populous city in Wisconsin and one of the places Donald Trump targeted as part of his efforts to overturn the election.

Woodall did not immediatel­y return a request for comment.

Gutiérrez “will lead the office at an important juncture when public scrutiny of the work of the department will be extremely high”, Johnson said in a statement. “I have confidence in her, and I will make certain the department has the resources it needs to fulfill its duties.”

It was not immediatel­y clear why Johnson chose to replace Woodall. There were reports on Monday that it was connected to her decision to publicly criticize election employees after the office mistakenly sent the wrong ballots to voters in the spring. Ahead of the April 2 Wisconsin presidenti­al primary, more than 200 voters in Milwaukee were mailed ballots marked for the wrong district – an error that Woodall attributed in strong terms to the staff of her office.

“I can’t express how frustratin­g and infuriatin­g it is that it just seems like there was no critical thinking involved or communicat­ion,” she told the Mil

waukee Journal-Sentinel.

Like many election officials, Woodall drew the intense scrutiny of election-denying activists in the wake of the 2020 presidenti­al election and faced harassment and threats in the following months. To pre-empt doubts and conspiracy theories ahead of the 2024 election, Woodall’s office developed new protocols to ensure transparen­cy while transmitti­ng the tally of absentee ballots.

The office has also faced internal tumult since 2020. A former official in the Milwaukee election office, Kimberly Zapata, was convicted of fraud for ordering multiple fake absentee ballots in 2022 and sentenced to a $3,000 fine and a year of probation earlier this month. It is not clear if there was any connection between the scandal and Woodall’s replacemen­t.

The 2020 election was Woodall’s first time running a presidenti­al election in Milwaukee, and this year’s presidenti­al election will be a first for her replacemen­t, Gutiérrez, who was appointed deputy director in early 2023.

“Change, especially when it is unexpected, can often be unsettling,” Gutiérrez wrote in a Sunday email that was reported by the Journal-Sentinel. “The experience of changing leadership is demanding and uncertain as we navigate uncharted waters and relearn to collaborat­e and communicat­e as an organizati­on.”

 ?? Photograph: Morry Gash/AP ?? Claire Woodall, the then executive director of the City of Milwaukee election commission, teaches a class to poll workers in October 2022 in Milwaukee.
Photograph: Morry Gash/AP Claire Woodall, the then executive director of the City of Milwaukee election commission, teaches a class to poll workers in October 2022 in Milwaukee.

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