Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers disputes Madison's argument that absentee voting is a privilege
Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers criticized an argument by Madison and its former city clerk that they shouldnt be held liable for losing 193 absentee ballots because absentee voting is a privilege, writing in a court filing that accepting such an argument would lead to absurd results.
The argument is key to the citys defense against a lawsuit that seeks monetary damages on behalf of the 193 Madison residents whose votes in the November 2024 election werent counted. It was first presented by the former clerk, Maribeth Witzel-Behl, citing a provision of state law, and then adopted by the city.
If courts accept the argument that absentee voting is a privilege and not a right, the Democratic governor said in a friend-of-the-court brief, election officials would be free to treat absentee ballots in ways that diminish peoples right to vote. For example, he wrote, they would be under no obligation to send voters replacement ballots if ballots they left in a drop box were damaged, and clerks could effectively disqualify ballots from politically disfavored precincts by intentionally not signing their initials on the ballot envelopes.
Experts say that for a governor to intervene in such a local matter is rare and underscores how seriously Evers views the potential implications. In an earlier communication with the court, the governor said the argument from the city and Witzel-Behl ignores longstanding state constitutional protections.
https://www.votebeat.org/wisconsin/2026/01/26/gov-tony-evers-rejects-madison-absentee-ballot-argument-privilege/