This post originally appeared at https://www.wisconsinrightnow.com/tyler-august/
(The Center Square) – The number-two in the Wisconsin Assembly says if lawmakers can’t come to terms on an early count law, it is up to Milwaukee to restore the voters’ faith in their election operation.
Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu said he doesn’t have the votes to pass Monday Count legislation. It would allow Milwaukee to count ballots the day before election day in order to avoid an after-midnight vote dump.
Assembly Majority Leader Tyler August, R-Lake Geneva, said Republicans in the Senate should vote on the plan. If they don’t, August said, then Milwaukee’s election managers need to act.
“It’s incumbent upon the city of Milwaukee to get their act together and count those ballots during the day and have that done so that there isn’t constantly this question about the processes in the city of Milwaukee,” August said.
Milwaukee uses a central count location, and election managers in the city say that slows down the counting of absentee ballots. Many times, that leaves a lull between when the votes from election day are tallied, and when the absentee vote count is delivered.
Critics say that lull, and the after-midnight ballot drop, leads to questions about election integrity in Milwaukee.
“People feel like the election is heading in one direction, [then] all the ballots come in at one time in the middle of the night, and it appears that there’s some kind of nefarious nature to what’s going on,” Assembly Speaker Robin Vos said Tuesday.
Critics of the Monday Count plan also see room for something nefarious. They fear that if Milwaukee has an absentee ballot count ahead of election day, then someone can somehow manufacture an exact number of votes to win.
August said other communities in Wisconsin don’t have the same troubles as Milwaukee and said that’s part of the problem.
“When I go to vote in the city of Lake Geneva they are processing those absentee ballots, there are hundreds of them in Lake Geneva, as well as a smaller staff, less election workers than in the city of Milwaukee has, and they’re able to get those done and part of their report that they send into the county clerk by like 9 p.m.,” August said. “So, Milwaukee needs to take a look at what they’re doing when it comes to counting absentee ballots, and for their own sake to prove to the people that their processes are secure, and safe, and fair. And get those reports in well before the middle of the night.”