A review of the latest voter registration tallies by Center for Media and Democracy (CMD) finds that almost 700,000 Wisconsin voters have been removed from the voter rolls since the end of December 2016, and that significantly more voters were purged from the rolls in Democratic leaning counties than Republican leaning counties.
The high number of purged voters could create major headaches on November 6, especially if turnout is as heavy as expected.
Wisconsin has participated in the Electronic Registration Information Center’s (ERIC) list maintenance program since 2016, which involves sending postcards to voters who are suspected of moving. If the voters don’t respond, they are removed from the rolls. Ninety percent of voters do not respond, but that doesn’t necessarily mean they have actually moved.
Due to the voter purge operation, the number of registered voters in Wisconsin dropped by 697,363 between January 2017 and February 2018, a decrease of 19%. In addition to a major purge in the summer of 2017, 232,358 voters were removed in January 2018.
Voter rolls have rebounded somewhat since then, thanks to high levels of interest in the upcoming midterm elections and voter registration drives. But as of October 1, the state voter rolls were still down by 566,012, a 15% decrease.
The number of purged voters has been especially dramatic in Milwaukee and Dane counties, the state’s two heaviest Democratic strongholds, where nearly one in four voters have been removed from the rolls.
Milwaukee County has lost 150,954 voters since the end of 2016, a 26% decrease; Dane County has lost 88,254, a 23% drop.
The data comes from monthly reports from the Wisconsin Election Commission.
“It is very likely that thousands of voters will show up to vote in November only to find that they are no longer registered,” said CMD’s David Armiak. “Fortunately, Wisconsin allows election day registration, but this could lead to confusion and delays during what is expected to be a high turnout election. Voters should be sure to bring proper identification with their correct address with them to the polls.”
There were reports of problems with mistakenly purged voters in the spring elections this year. More than 7,000 voters had to be reinstated after the February 2018 primary election due to errors in the purge program.
The voter registration drop comes despite a widely reported surge in Democratic voter enthusiasm this year, and a Dane County Democratic turnout in the spring primary that was 40 percent higher than the previous record.
Wisconsin voters can confirm their voter registration here.
CMD is printing in full a statement in response to our story from the Wisconsin Elections Commission.
The Wisconsin Elections Commission quickly realized during the 2018 February Spring Primary that some voters who had not moved were deactivated in January 2018. WEC took immediate steps to create a supplemental poll list to create a safety net so that voters who had been erroneously removed would be able to vote without reregistering.
At the April 2018 Spring Election, there were 1,328 voters who used the supplemental poll list and were reactivated out of 997,485 voters at that election. At the August 2018 Partisan Primary, there were 1,059 voters who used the ERIC Supplemental Poll List out of more than 1.4 million votes cast.
The City of Milwaukee Election Commission recently asked the WEC to reactivate approximately 36,000 voters in the city, which the WEC has done. We have also reactivated voters at the requests of municipal clerks in Green Bay and Hobart.
In addition to removing people who may have moved or died, WEC is also reaching out to people who may be eligible to vote but are not registered. In September of 2016, we mailed 1.28 million postcards to people with a state driver license or state ID card who were not registered, telling them how to register. In June 2018, we mailed more than 384,000 registration postcards to new people in the DMV database who appeared to be eligible but unregistered, including people who were deactivated in January 2018.
manish gupta
I live out of Country, still a US citizen and I mail my ballot in early.
I vote in Florida, Brevard cty….how can I find out that my ballot was counted and not sitting in a warehouse long after election and using the excuse it was sent to late. Florida elections are so corrupt.
You can’t tell me that Nelson, Gillum and Tim Canova all lost to the worse republicans that nobody wanted in office. Even if its a republican state. Should have been INVESTIGATED. There’s a story. Good job on this article.
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Candace Parker
I live out of Country, still a US citizen and I mail my ballot in early.
I vote in Florida, Brevard cty….how can I find out that my ballot was counted and not sitting in a warehouse long after election and using the excuse it was sent to late. Florida elections are so corrupt.
You can’t tell me that Nelson, Gillum and Tim Canova all lost to the worse republicans that nobody wanted in office. Even if its a republican state. Should have been INVESTIGATED. There’s a story. Good job on this article.
Steven Rosenfeld
I hope readers of this report are not left discouraged, because, unlike many states, WS has Election Day registration. That means any resident can vote.
But why such a big number of removals? I suspect it has to do with the 4-year window for removals, where if you haven’t voted in that time you get taken off the rolls. (That timetable follows a similar window in federal law, the National Voter Registration Act; which WS is exempt from, because it has same-day registration.) That four-year window means people who only vote in some presidential years can get removed. There may be other reasons, too.
Are all list purges bad? Not necessarily, if you move or die. What’s the mobility rate in WS? That will give you some context. IE, if 10 percent of the state moves annually, you get some more sense of what’s behind the big numbers.
By the way, this piece doesn’t quite portray what ERIC does (the Electronic Registration Information Center). That center identifies all of the eligible voters in participating states. Then the states send those eligible voters notices urging them to register. ERIC also updates voter files with the latest info from gov’t data sources. ERIC may have some hiccups, but it’s been the most successful new national operation registering voters in years. It’s added millions of new voters.
Anyway, if you’re in WS, do not despair, just go out and vote. You’re lucky to be in a same-day registration state. Just ask Georgians…
Philip Dumitru
Thank you for including the response from the WEC. That was enlightening and it reminded me to take a deep breath before yelling at my computer display.
Leon
ERIC is a product of the Pew Foundation and the states that opt in pay for the service. It is supposed to keep voter registration polls up to date and even help people re-register who have moved. But I fear it hasn’t has the intended effect. Credit goes to structural racism (poor and mostly people of color move much more frequently) combined with institutional racism (in this case an digital algorithm that tracks them down.)
T. Greg Bell
Thanks for this report. My question is how to know in advance of election day if your name was purged? If I voted in 2016 and again in spring 2018 would my WI registration insure that I am still on the registration list for this fall’s election? T. Greg Bell
David Armiak
You can check on the status of your registration here.
NANCY ANGSTEN
WHEN ALL ELSE FAILS, CHEAT!
Bea Dunn
That’s the Republican way — win at all costs. Voter fraud is pretty much nonexistent but election fraud as perpetrated by Republican majorities nationwide is pervasive.
Monics Sodano
Republicans will use any method legal or illegal to sway the vote because it’s the only way they can win. This is a strong indication thatvthe 2016 election was more likely than not was illegitimate. There should have been a recount in 3 states that are questionable
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Jeffrey Jump
Frightening and sobering to know so many take their voting rights for granted, or not vote at all . Our democracy is at stake.