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Election Night in Wisconsin: See live results [1]

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Date: 2024-11-06 02:05:08+00:00

Reading Time: 7 minutes

Good evening, Wisconsin. Polls are now closed.

Over the course of the next several hours, votes here in Wisconsin will come in, likely in patches. Voters are helping choose the next president, a U.S. senator, eight members of the U.S. House, and state representatives and senators and whether to amend the state constitution and approve or shoot down scores of local ballot referendums.

If someone declares victory shortly after polls close — especially in the presidential election — be extremely skeptical. In 2020 former President Donald Trump declared victory while millions of votes still needed to be counted. And, as has been well documented, President Joe Biden won that election. Trump could once again prematurely — and potentially baselessly — claim victory again this year, with some members of his orbit urging the former president to address voters even earlier on election night than in 2020.

It’s important to remember that the results reported on election night are unofficial. At Wisconsin Watch, we look to the Associated Press and other reputable news organizations for our race calls.

The vote counting process will take time and varies by municipality in Wisconsin. Definitive initial results could also be slow to come in, especially after a tabulator problem forced election workers in Milwaukee to restart their count of absentee ballots.

As Wisconsin residents brace for a late night or even an early morning, here’s when other high-profile statewide races here in Wisconsin were called by the Associated Press:

2018 U.S. Senate race: Tuesday, Nov. 6, 8:48 p.m.

2018 gubernatorial race: Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1:24 a.m.

2020 presidential race: Wednesday, Nov. 4, 1:16 p.m.

2022 gubernatorial race: Wednesday, Nov. 9, 1:12 a.m.

2022 U.S. Senate race: Wednesday, Nov. 9, 11:46 a.m.

Check out the Wisconsin Watch voter guide for results from the Associated Press for each individual race in Wisconsin.

– Jack Kelly

8 p.m.

Republicans poised to hold 6-2 House edge

Republicans were poised to win all six seats they currently control in Wisconsin’s House delegation.

As of midnight Tuesday the Associated Press had called winners in every race but the 3rd Congressional District, where Republican Rep. Derrick Van Orden was building a solid lead over Democratic challenger Rebecca Cooke.

Incumbent Democrats Mark Pocan and Gwen Moore and Republicans Bryan Steil, Scott Fitzgerald, Glenn Grothman and Tom Tiffany won their races.

Thanking his family, friends and former President Donald Trump, newcomer Republican Tony Wied gave a victory speech to a crowd of supporters at The Legacy Hotel in Green Bay, Wisconsin.

Wied’s campaign victory in Wisconsin’s largely red 8th congressional district came as no surprise. Previous Rep. Michael Gallagher, also a Republican, won the district by comfortable margins during each election cycle between 2016 and 2022.

Wied credited much of his success to an endorsement from former President Donald Trump, saying that Trump’s “support for me (during) this campaign was second to none.”

Even before Green Bay precincts reported any significant results, local Republican candidates felt confident about the election.

Patrick Buckley, candidate for the 89th Assembly District, said he thought efforts to reach voters and canvass would end up paying off. Buckley, a first time Assembly candidate, is facing off against Democrat Ryan Spaude, also a first time Assembly candidate, in the Green Bay district.

“We did a wonderful job, and hopefully voters will see that,” Buckley said. “I think for Republicans, it should be a good night.”

Citizenship voting amendment passes

Wisconsin voters approved a constitutional amendment in Tuesday’s elections that prohibits foreign nationals from voting in the state.

Republicans across the country have been pushing voters to adopt constitutional amendments that explicitly prohibit non-U.S. citizens from voting. The move was spurred by the District of Columbia and municipalities in California, Maryland and Vermont allowing non-citizens to vote in local elections.

The Wisconsin Constitution states that every U.S. citizen who is at least 18 can vote. The amendment revises that language to read that only U.S. citizens can vote in federal, state and local elections held in Wisconsin.

The amendment was on the ballot in seven other states besides Wisconsin this cycle, according to Ballotpedia. North Dakota, Alabama, Florida, Colorado, Ohio and Louisiana have already adopted it.

Democrats contend the measures could create hurdles for legal voters and lead people to believe that the problem of noncitizens voting is bigger than it really is. Data from states indicates that voting by noncitizens is rare, although Republican officials in Alabama, Georgia, Ohio and Texas have highlighted voter registration reviews that turned up potential noncitizens.

– Todd Richmond, The Associated Press

Battle for Assembly could upend Wisconsin politics

Among the races Wisconsin Watch is tracking most closely are eight state Assembly contests in the following districts:

District 26: This toss-up district encompasses the city of Sheboygan and runs south along the lakefront toward Oostburg. It leans slightly Democratic.

This toss-up district encompasses the city of Sheboygan and runs south along the lakefront toward Oostburg. It leans slightly Democratic. District 30: This western Wisconsin toss-up district encompasses River Falls, extending north to Hudson. It leans slightly Republican.

This western Wisconsin toss-up district encompasses River Falls, extending north to Hudson. It leans slightly Republican. District 61: This toss-up district covers the southwestern Milwaukee villages of Greendale and Hales Corners and parts of Greenfield. It leans slightly Democratic.

This toss-up district covers the southwestern Milwaukee villages of Greendale and Hales Corners and parts of Greenfield. It leans slightly Democratic. District 85: This toss-up district covers Wausau, extending to also include Weston to the east. It leans slightly Republican.

This toss-up district covers Wausau, extending to also include Weston to the east. It leans slightly Republican. District 88: This toss-up district covers the southeastern part of Green Bay, including Allouez and Bellevue, and stretches down toward De Pere. It leans slightly Republican.

This toss-up district covers the southeastern part of Green Bay, including Allouez and Bellevue, and stretches down toward De Pere. It leans slightly Republican. District 89: This southwestern Green Bay district includes Ashwaubenon and borders the Fox River to the east. It is a toss-up district that leans slightly Democratic.

This southwestern Green Bay district includes Ashwaubenon and borders the Fox River to the east. It is a toss-up district that leans slightly Democratic. District 92: This western Wisconsin toss-up district encompasses Menomonie and Chippewa Falls and lies to the north of Eau Claire. It leans slightly Republican.

This western Wisconsin toss-up district encompasses Menomonie and Chippewa Falls and lies to the north of Eau Claire. It leans slightly Republican. District 94: This western Wisconsin toss-up district covers parts of La Crosse and Trempealeau counties. It includes the cities of Galesville and Onalaska and the villages of Ettrick, Holmen and West Salem, along with part of the north side of La Crosse. It leans slightly Democratic.

The partisan splits of these eight districts each hover within 3%, according to a Wisconsin Watch analysis of past voting patterns. Four of them are a tick more Republican, and the other four lean barely Democratic.

If election results align with the partisan lean — however slight — of each district, that would put Republicans at a one-member majority of 50-49 in the Assembly. If Democrats keep the four seats and flip one of the four Republican-leaning toss-ups, they will emerge with a 50-49 majority.

These eight races could be the ones that upend Wisconsin politics.

– Jack Kelly and Hallie Claflin

8 p.m.

Control of Wisconsin Assembly runs through eight competitive races Read about the eight toss-up districts that could decide the fate of the Wisconsin Assembly.

Sheboygan incumbent fights to keep Assembly seat without local GOP support in newly drawn toss-up district

A freshman Republican Assembly member’s fight to hold her Sheboygan seat was complicated after she lost the support of the Sheboygan County GOP earlier this year. The infighting could be a sign of the changing face of the Republican Party in Wisconsin.

Freshman Rep. Amy Binsfeld, R-Sheboygan, views the local party as extremist and distanced herself from it in January due to its anti-abortion stance and member concerns about election integrity, according to party chair Russ Otten.

“I find that incredible in a person who’s running as a Republican in a very tight race,” Otten told Wisconsin Watch.

Text messages posted by the county GOP in September show Binsfeld asked the party to distribute her campaign signs, but they refused to do so after she declined to meet with the party’s leaders, Otten said.

“I feel you should probably confirm that choice with all Republican voters in the 26th District being you are willing to give up a seat to the Democrats in November,” Binsfeld wrote in the exchange. “I’m asking for signs to be available to Republican voters.”

Binsfeld did not immediately reply to Wisconsin Watch’s request for comment.

“She does not like the fact that our county party has become a patriot-driven party,” Otten said. “She is a cohort of Robin Vos in Madison, and we see Robin Vos as part of the problem.”

Binsfeld faces Democratic newcomer Joe Sheehan, who decided to run earlier this year after new legislative maps reunited the city of Sheboygan, which was split in half to secure two Republican seats under Wisconsin’s previously gerrymandered maps. The district is now a toss-up, with a slight Democratic lean.

– Hallie Claflin

8:30 p.m.

Stephanie Rushing, Milwaukee Election Commission election services coordinator, sorts through rejected absentee ballots on Election Day, Nov. 5, 2024, at Milwaukee Central Count at the Baird Center in Milwaukee. (Joe Timmerman / Wisconsin Watch)

Milwaukee setback stands out in otherwise smooth Wisconsin election

Polls closed across Wisconsin after an Election Day marked most notably by a human error in Milwaukee that prompted city election officials to count 31,000 absentee ballots all over again, potentially delaying the state’s results for hours.

In Milwaukee, election chief Paulina Gutiérrez projected that the city’s counting of absentee ballots would go well into Wednesday morning, partially a result of her decision Tuesday afternoon to make election workers count 31,000 absentee ballots all over again because some staff didn’t lock tabulator doors in the early morning.

For security reasons, those panel doors — which cover the on/off switch and sometimes a slot for USB drives — are to be locked during counting, though other security measures ensured there was no chance of tampering.

The decision to restart the count, city spokesperson Jeff Fleming said, was “out of an abundance of caution.”

Wisconsin Elections Commission Administrator Meagan Wolfe said the commission didn’t weigh in on the city’s decision to rerun the batch of ballots, but she praised the city’s transparency throughout the process.

After Gutiérrez made that decision, the city put out an all-call to every Milwaukee employee to help election officials count the ballots that had already been tabulated. Between 30 and 50 city staff from health, fire and other departments came to help, city spokesperson Caroline Reinwald said.

“Things are moving really smoothly right now and quickly, so hopefully this isn’t actually that much of a delay,” she said.

But Republican leaders criticized the oversight that led to the second count. U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin called Milwaukee’s central count “grotesquely disorganized.” State GOP Chair Brian Schimming said about election officials, “You had one job,” adding that the election operation had gone “ridiculously wrong.”

Johnson said his concerns about Milwaukee election officials’ oversight could be alleviated if they present him video logs of the central counting site as well as records from the initial and second count of the 31,000 absentee ballots, including how they’re split by party. There are video streams of central count, but vote totals weren’t exported in the manner that Johnson was seeking, though each vote has a paper trail, city officials stated.

Election Day in Milwaukee was also marked by a lawsuit filed by the Republican National Committee, alleging that GOP election observers were being restricted at city election sites. The GOP walked back its claims at a Tuesday hearing, conceding there weren’t any issues.

Outside of Milwaukee, election officials faced few issues.

In Thornapple, a northern Wisconsin town that faced a Justice Department lawsuit over its decision not to use accessible voting machines in the past, election officials did have a voting machine in use, said Erin Webster, a local resident who was an election observer on Tuesday.

The state had a surge of early in-person voting, but election officials said that Tuesday was still very busy. Melissa Kono, who has been a clerk in the small northern Wisconsin town of Burnside since 2013, said it was the most intense election she had ever administered in terms of turnout.

— Alexander Shur, Votebeat

11 p.m.

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If we send you a request to change or remove Wisconsin Watch content from your site, you must agree to do so immediately. *** Also, the code below will NOT copy the featured image on the page. You are welcome to download the main image as a separate element for publication with this story. *** You are welcome to republish our articles forusing the following ground rules. For questions regarding republishing rules please contact Jeff Bauer, digital editor and producer, at [email protected] Live election results: Citizenship voting amendment passes as Senate, presidential races deadlocked <h1>Live election results: Citizenship voting amendment passes as Senate, presidential races deadlocked</h1> <p class="byline">by Jack Kelly / Wisconsin Watch, Wisconsin Watch <br />November 5, 2024</p> <p>Good evening, Wisconsin. Polls are now closed.</p> <p>Over the course of the next several hours, votes here in Wisconsin will come in, likely in patches. Voters are helping choose the next president, a U.S. senator, eight members of the U.S. House, and state representatives and senators and whether to amend the state constitution and approve or shoot down scores of local ballot referendums.</p> <p>If someone declares victory shortly after polls close — especially in the presidential election — be extremely skeptical. In 2020 former President Donald Trump declared victory while millions of votes still needed to be counted. And, as has been well documented, President Joe Biden won that election. Trump could once again prematurely — and potentially baselessly — claim victory again this year, with some members of his orbit <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2024/10/29/steve-bannon-released-from-prison/">urging</a> the former president to address voters even earlier on election night than in 2020.</p> <p>It’s important to remember that the results reported on election night are unofficial. At Wisconsin Watch, we look to the Associated Press and other reputable news organizations for our race calls. </p> <p>The vote counting process will take time and varies by municipality in Wisconsin. Definitive initial results could also be slow to come in, especially after a <a href="https://wisconsinwatch.org/2024/11/milwaukee-wisconsin-election-absentee-ballots-tabulator-recount/">tabulator problem</a> forced election workers in Milwaukee to restart their count of absentee ballots.</p> <p>As Wisconsin residents brace for a late night or even an early morning, here’s when other high-profile statewide races here in Wisconsin were called by the Associated Press:</p> <ul class="wp-block-list"> <li>2018 U.S. Senate race: Tuesday, Nov. 6, 8:48 p.m.</li> <li>2018 gubernatorial race: Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1:24 a.m.</li> <li>2020 presidential race: Wednesday, Nov. 4, 1:16 p.m.</li> <li>2022 gubernatorial race: Wednesday, Nov. 9, 1:12 a.m.</li> <li>2022 U.S. Senate race: Wednesday, Nov. 9, 11:46 a.m.</li> </ul> <p>Check out the <a href="https://wisconsinwatch.org/wisconsin-2024-voter-guide-what-you-need-to-know/">Wisconsin Watch voter guide</a> for results from the Associated Press for each individual race in Wisconsin.</p> <p><em>– Jack Kelly</em></p> <p><em>8 p.m.</em></p> <h2 class="wp-block-heading">Republicans poised to hold 6-2 House edge</h2> <p>Republicans were poised to win all six seats they currently control in Wisconsin's House delegation.</p> <p>As of midnight Tuesday the Associated Press had called winners in every race but the 3rd Congressional District, where Republican Rep. Derrick Van Orden was building a solid lead over Democratic challenger Rebecca Cooke.</p> <p>Incumbent Democrats Mark Pocan and Gwen Moore and Republicans Bryan Steil, Scott Fitzgerald, Glenn Grothman and Tom Tiffany won their races.</p> <p>Thanking his family, friends and former President Donald Trump, newcomer Republican Tony Wied gave a victory speech to a crowd of supporters at The Legacy Hotel in Green Bay, Wisconsin.</p> <p>Wied’s campaign victory in Wisconsin’s largely red 8th congressional district came as no surprise. Previous Rep. Michael Gallagher, also a Republican, won the district by comfortable margins during each election cycle between 2016 and 2022.</p> <p>Wied credited much of his success to an <a href="https://www.wispolitics.com/2024/trump-in-wied-ad-offers-his-complete-and-total-endorsement/">endorsement from former President Donald Trump, </a>saying that Trump’s “support for me (during) this campaign was second to none.”</p> <p>Even before Green Bay precincts reported any significant results, local Republican candidates felt confident about the election.</p> <p>Patrick Buckley, candidate for the 89th Assembly District, said he thought efforts to reach voters and canvass would end up paying off. Buckley, a first time Assembly candidate, is facing off against Democrat Ryan Spaude, also a first time Assembly candidate, in the Green Bay district.</p> <p>“We did a wonderful job, and hopefully voters will see that,” Buckley said. “I think for Republicans, it should be a good night.”</p> <h2 class="wp-block-heading">Citizenship voting amendment passes</h2> <p>Wisconsin voters approved a constitutional amendment in Tuesday’s elections that prohibits foreign nationals from voting in the state.</p> <p>Republicans across the country have been pushing voters to adopt constitutional amendments that explicitly prohibit non-U.S. citizens from voting. The move was spurred by the District of Columbia and municipalities in California, Maryland and Vermont allowing non-citizens to vote in local elections.</p> <p>The Wisconsin Constitution states that every U.S. citizen who is at least 18 can vote. The amendment revises that language to read that only U.S. citizens can vote in federal, state and local elections held in Wisconsin.</p> <p>The amendment was on the ballot in seven other states besides Wisconsin this cycle, according to Ballotpedia. North Dakota, Alabama, Florida, Colorado, Ohio and Louisiana have already adopted it.</p> <p>Democrats contend the measures could create hurdles for legal voters and lead people to believe that the problem of noncitizens voting is bigger than it really is. Data from states indicates that voting by noncitizens is rare, although Republican officials in Alabama, Georgia, Ohio and Texas have highlighted voter registration reviews that turned up potential noncitizens.</p> <p><em>– Todd Richmond, The Associated Press</em></p> <h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Battle for Assembly could upend Wisconsin politics</strong></h2> <p>Among the races Wisconsin Watch is tracking most closely are eight state Assembly contests in the following districts:</p> <ul class="wp-block-list"> <li><strong>District 26:</strong> This toss-up district encompasses the city of Sheboygan and runs south along the lakefront toward Oostburg. It leans slightly Democratic. </li> <li><strong>District 30:</strong> This western Wisconsin toss-up district encompasses River Falls, extending north to Hudson. It leans slightly Republican. </li> <li><strong>District 61:</strong> This toss-up district covers the southwestern Milwaukee villages of Greendale and Hales Corners and parts of Greenfield. It leans slightly Democratic. </li> <li><strong>District 85: </strong>This toss-up district covers Wausau, extending to also include Weston to the east. It leans slightly Republican. </li> <li><strong>District 88: </strong>This toss-up district covers the southeastern part of Green Bay, including Allouez and Bellevue, and stretches down toward De Pere. It leans slightly Republican. </li> <li><strong>District 89: </strong>This southwestern Green Bay district includes Ashwaubenon and borders the Fox River to the east. It is a toss-up district that leans slightly Democratic. </li> <li><strong>District 92: </strong>This western Wisconsin toss-up district encompasses Menomonie and Chippewa Falls and lies to the north of Eau Claire. It leans slightly Republican. </li> <li><strong>District 94: </strong>This western Wisconsin toss-up district covers parts of La Crosse and Trempealeau counties. It includes the cities of Galesville and Onalaska and the villages of Ettrick, Holmen and West Salem, along with part of the north side of La Crosse. It leans slightly Democratic. </li> </ul> <p>The partisan splits of these eight districts each hover within 3%, according to a Wisconsin Watch analysis of past voting patterns. Four of them are a tick more Republican, and the other four lean barely Democratic. </p> <div class="flourish-embed flourish-parliament" data-src="visualisation/19802824"><img src="https://public.flourish.studio/visualisation/19802824/thumbnail" width="100%" alt="parliament visualization" /></div> <p>If <a href="https://wisconsinwatch.org/wisconsin-2024-voter-guide-what-you-need-to-know/">election results</a> align with the partisan lean — however slight — of each district, that would put Republicans at a one-member majority of 50-49 in the Assembly. If Democrats keep the four seats and flip one of the four Republican-leaning toss-ups, they will emerge with a 50-49 majority.</p> <p>These eight races could be the ones that upend Wisconsin politics. </p> <p><em>– Jack Kelly and Hallie Claflin</em></p> <p><em>8 p.m.</em></p> <div class="flourish-embed flourish-parliament" data-src="visualisation/20038453"><img src="https://public.flourish.studio/visualisation/20038453/thumbnail" width="100%" alt="parliament visualization" /></div> <h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Sheboygan incumbent fights to keep Assembly seat without local GOP support in newly drawn toss-up district</strong></h2> <p>A freshman Republican Assembly member’s fight to hold her Sheboygan seat was complicated after she lost the support of the Sheboygan County GOP earlier this year. The infighting could be a sign of the changing face of the Republican Party in Wisconsin.</p> <p>Freshman Rep. Amy Binsfeld, R-Sheboygan, views the local party as extremist and distanced herself from it in January due to its anti-abortion stance and member concerns about election integrity, according to party chair Russ Otten.</p> <p>“I find that incredible in a person who's running as a Republican in a very tight race,” Otten told Wisconsin Watch.</p> <p>Text messages posted by the county GOP in September show Binsfeld asked the party to distribute her campaign signs, but they refused to do so after she declined to meet with the party’s leaders, Otten said.</p> <p>“I feel you should probably confirm that choice with all Republican voters in the 26th District being you are willing to give up a seat to the Democrats in November,” Binsfeld wrote in the exchange. “I’m asking for signs to be available to Republican voters.” </p> <p>Binsfeld did not immediately reply to Wisconsin Watch’s request for comment.</p> <p>“She does not like the fact that our county party has become a patriot-driven party,” Otten said. “She is a cohort of Robin Vos in Madison, and we see Robin Vos as part of the problem.”</p> <p>Binsfeld faces Democratic newcomer Joe Sheehan, who decided to run earlier this year after new legislative maps reunited the city of Sheboygan, which was split in half to secure two Republican seats under Wisconsin’s previously gerrymandered maps. The district is now a toss-up, with a slight Democratic lean.</p> <p><em>– Hallie Claflin</em></p> <p><em>8:30 p.m.</em></p> <figure class="wp-block-image aligncenter size-large"><img src="https://wisconsinwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/20241105-General-Election-Voting-Timmerman-44-782x521.jpg" alt="" class="wp-image-1299993" /><figcaption class="wp-element-caption">Stephanie Rushing, Milwaukee Election Commission election services coordinator, sorts through rejected absentee ballots on Election Day, Nov. 5, 2024, at Milwaukee Central Count at the Baird Center in Milwaukee. (Joe Timmerman / Wisconsin Watch)</figcaption></figure> <h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Milwaukee setback stands out in otherwise smooth Wisconsin election</strong></h2> <p>Polls closed across Wisconsin after an Election Day marked most notably by a human error in Milwaukee that prompted city election officials to count 31,000 absentee ballots all over again, potentially delaying the state’s results for hours.</p> <p>In Milwaukee, election chief Paulina Gutiérrez projected that the city’s counting of absentee ballots would go well into Wednesday morning, partially a result of her decision Tuesday afternoon to make election workers count 31,000 absentee ballots all over again because some <a href="https://www.votebeat.org/wisconsin/2024/11/06/milwaukee-absentee-ballot-count-starts-over-tabulator-panels/">staff didn’t lock tabulator doors in the early morning</a>. </p> <p>For security reasons, those panel doors — which cover the on/off switch and sometimes a slot for USB drives — are to be locked during counting, though other security measures ensured there was no chance of tampering.</p> <p>The decision to restart the count, city spokesperson Jeff Fleming said, was “out of an abundance of caution.”</p> <p>Wisconsin Elections Commission Administrator Meagan Wolfe said the commission didn’t weigh in on the city’s decision to rerun the batch of ballots, but she praised the city’s transparency throughout the process.</p> <p>After Gutiérrez made that decision, the city put out an all-call to every Milwaukee employee to help election officials count the ballots that had already been tabulated. Between 30 and 50 city staff from health, fire and other departments came to help, city spokesperson Caroline Reinwald said.</p> <p>“Things are moving really smoothly right now and quickly, so hopefully this isn't actually that much of a delay,” she said.</p> <p>But Republican leaders criticized the oversight that led to the second count. U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin called Milwaukee’s central count “grotesquely disorganized.” State GOP Chair Brian Schimming said about election officials, “You had one job,” adding that the election operation had gone “ridiculously wrong.”</p> <p>Johnson said his concerns about Milwaukee election officials’ oversight could be alleviated if they present him video logs of the central counting site as well as records from the initial and second count of the 31,000 absentee ballots, including how they’re split by party. There are video streams of central count, but vote totals weren’t exported in the manner that Johnson was seeking, though each vote has a paper trail, city officials stated.</p> <p>Election Day in Milwaukee was also marked by a lawsuit filed by the Republican National Committee, alleging that GOP election observers were being restricted at city election sites. The GOP walked back its claims at a Tuesday hearing, <a href="https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/politics/2024/11/05/rnc-walks-back-claims-on-election-observer-limits-at-milwaukee-polls/76053867007/">conceding there weren’t any issues</a>.</p> <p>Outside of Milwaukee, election officials faced few issues. </p> <p>In Thornapple, a <a href="https://www.votebeat.org/wisconsin/2024/09/21/doj-lawsuit-thornapple-lawrence-accessible-voting-machines-hava/">northern Wisconsin town that faced a Justice Department lawsuit</a> over its decision not to use accessible voting machines in the past, election officials did have a voting machine in use, said Erin Webster, a local resident who was an election observer on Tuesday.</p> <p>The state had a <a href="https://www.votebeat.org/wisconsin/2024/11/04/early-voting-surges-high-republican-turnout-absentee-in-person/">surge of early in-person voting</a>, but election officials said that Tuesday was still very busy. Melissa Kono, who has been a clerk in the small northern Wisconsin town of Burnside since 2013, said it was the most intense election she had ever administered in terms of turnout.</p> <p><em>— Alexander Shur, Votebeat</em></p> <p><em>11 p.m.</em></p> <p>This <a target="_blank" href="https://wisconsinwatch.org/2024/11/wisconsin-election-vote-polls-results-assembly-senate-president/">article</a> first appeared on <a target="_blank" href="https://wisconsinwatch.org">Wisconsin Watch</a> and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.<img src="https://i0.wp.com/wisconsinwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/cropped-WCIJ_IconOnly_FullColor_RGB-1.png?fit=150%2C150&amp;quality=100&amp;ssl=1" style="width:1em;height:1em;margin-left:10px;"><img id="republication-tracker-tool-source" src="https://wisconsinwatch.org/?republication-pixel=true&post=1299991&amp;ga4=G-D2S69Y9TDB" style="width:1px;height:1px;"><script> PARSELY = { autotrack: false, onload: function() { PARSELY.beacon.trackPageView({ url: "https://wisconsinwatch.org/2024/11/wisconsin-election-vote-polls-results-assembly-senate-president/", urlref: window.location.href }); } } </script> <script id="parsely-cfg" src="//cdn.parsely.com/keys/wisconsinwatch.org/p.js"></script></p> Copy to Clipboard

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