Wisconsin Court Temporarily Blocks Removal of up to 209,000 Names From Voter Rolls

Isabel van Brugen
By Isabel van Brugen
January 15, 2020US News
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Wisconsin Court Temporarily Blocks Removal of up to 209,000 Names From Voter Rolls
File photo of presidential ballots counting in Wisconsin, on Dec 1, 2016. (Andy Manis/Getty Images)

A Wisconsin appeals court ordered the state on Jan. 14 to temporarily halt the removal of more than 200,000 people from its voter registration rolls for failing to answer questions about their addresses.

The removal of as many as 209,000 names was put on hold a day after an Ozaukee County judge found three members of the Wisconsin Elections Commission in contempt of court for ignoring an order he gave in December 2019.

An appeals court judge also blocked the contempt finding in a separate order, putting on hold a decision that fined the three Democratic members $250 a day each until they voted to purge the names.

The appeals court on Tuesday ordered the lower court’s order against the commissioners, and a Dec. 13 order to purge the names from voter rolls, “stayed until further order of this court,” the court clerk wrote.

The rulings will ensure, temporarily, that thousands of names will not be removed from the rolls, until the appeals court reviews the dispute. Democrats have raised the alarm over the potential removal of so many names from the voter roll in a state set to be a battleground when President Donald Trump seeks reelection in November.

The order to remove hundreds of thousands of names was initially made last month, and came after the state Elections Commission sent notices in October last year to more than 230,000 people that were thought to have moved and requested that they update their voter registrations or state that they hadn’t moved.

The letters were sent to the voters based on data from the Electronic Registration Information Center that suggested they had potentially changed address. If they didn’t respond, they were in danger of being removed from the rolls by 2021.

“We want voters to be prepared for 2020,” said Meagan Wolfe, Wisconsin’s chief elections official, at the time. “This mailing is designed to help people who may have moved within Wisconsin make sure they’re ready to vote next year. It will not keep anyone eligible from voting.”

“If you move, even to an apartment in the same building, you must update your voter record by re-registering,” Wolfe said.

Some 209,000 hadn’t responded.

The conservative Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty (WILL) brought a case by three voters, who said the state should remove them from the rolls faster. Judge Malloy agreed and ordered the purge, but the commission hasn’t taken action. The Republican commissioners said they had been trying to follow the order but were blocked by Democrats.

Rick Esenberg, president of WILL, said in a statement he would now focus on the appeals court.

“What is true yesterday is true today,” Esenberg said. “The Wisconsin Elections Commission isn’t following state law and we look forward to making that case in the Court of Appeals.”

The Wisconsin Election Commission had said it wanted to avoid repeat of a previous purge when thousands of names had been flagged erroneously.

Voters removed from the rolls can re-register to vote at the polls on Election Day at their clerk’s offices or online at myvote.wi.gov.

The decision to scrub voters’ names from the state’s voter registration rolls is also being challenged by the League of Women Voters of Wisconsin in federal court, reported CBS News. The league has argued that while individuals wrongly removed from the rolls can re-register on an election day under state law, the removal was a burden on their right to vote.

It is not yet known how long the appeals court will take to review the dispute.

Reuters and Zachary Stieber contributed to this report.

From The Epoch Times

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