WASHINGTON, DC – On Wednesday, Wisconsin’s Waukesha County Circuit Court handed a massive win to the rule of law in Kormanik v. Wisconsin Elections Commission. The court ruled that the Wisconsin Elections Commission cannot permit election clerks to run a “re-voting” scheme, where clerks allow people to endlessly alter their submitted votes until the election day buzzer. The court said Wisconsin law is “unambiguous” in prohibiting that activity. Despite Wisconsin law, activists wanted to re-envision the law to secure endless re-voting. This decision confirms that, in Wisconsin, once a ballot is cast, it is cast. It cannot be fished out of the ballot box to give a voter a second bite at the apple.
“Wisconsin bureaucrats and their activist allies showed they do not care about the rules surrounding absentee voting that help the public trust results. Public polling continues to show voters lack confidence in elections because of precisely the type of anti-democratic, unlawful manipulation we were able to stop in Wisconsin. The least voters can ask for are elections run according to the law. The win in Wisconsin is a solid step forward in guaranteeing that future. But our work is not done. Activist attorney Marc Elias is pushing two lawsuits in the state to dismantle other features that safeguard its absentee system from misconduct and mistrust. We will keep fighting until the rule of law and the will of the people prevail.”
-Derek Lyons, President and CEO of RITE
ABOUT RITE
Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections is a non-profit working to preserve elections as the democratic voice of the people. American elections set the course of our great nation. Electoral systems must be designed, safeguarded, and implemented in a manner that reflects the will of our citizens so that electoral results enjoy the public’s full faith and confidence.