, ,

Republican Lawmakers Order Audit Of Wisconsin’s Election System

The Nonpartisan Legislative Audit Bureau Will Handle The Review

By
Wisconsin state capitol building
Phil Roeder (CC-BY)

Republican state lawmakers have ordered an audit of the way elections are administered in Wisconsin, a move Democrats warn could feed conspiracy theories and cast doubt on future elections.

GOP lawmakers who run the Legislature’s audit committee voted to conduct the review Thursday. Wisconsin’s nonpartisan Legislative Audit Bureau will conduct the study.

The audit will look at how the Wisconsin Elections Commission and local clerks comply with election laws. It will also study the use of electronic voting machines, and how complaints about the general election have been handled.

Stay informed on the latest news

Sign up for WPR’s email newsletter.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Republicans who ordered the audit said they were responding to a deluge of contacts from constituents, who had questions about how the 2020 election was conducted.

“I know that this audit will help people understand our elections better and hopefully put to rest concerns,” said Sen. Robert Cowles, R-Green Bay, the committee’s co-chair.

Democrats said they had faith that the Legislative Audit Bureau would conduct a thorough audit, but they worried about the timing.

“And I fear that this will lead to more doubts about future elections,” said Sen. Melissa Agard, D-Madison.

President Joe Biden won Wisconsin by 20,682 votes following a recount in Dane and Milwaukee counties. The recount resulted in few changes to the results reported on election night.

Former President Donald Trump and Republican allies filed several lawsuits in an effort to overturn Wisconsin’s results. In each case, the courts rejected them.

The Wisconsin Elections Commission conducted a partial audit of its voting machines after the election. That audit uncovered no problems.

During a GOP-led hearing on the election last year, Republican Elections Commissioner Dean Knudson testified that there was no evidence in the election of “ballot dumps” and no fraud related to Dominion voting machines.