-
During Disability Voting Rights Week, Milwaukee officials and voters held an event to demonstrate the ExpressVote machine and share how its accessibility features are helping disabled voters.
-
The Wisconsin Elections Commission has OK'd a guidance document for election clerks that covers when people with disabilities have help returning a completed absentee ballot this fall. But some members of the panel expect a lawsuit challenging the rules.
-
Wisconsin secretary of state hopeful Amy Loudenbeck says if she wins lawmakers should give her some control of elections in the key battleground state but the Republican candidate isn't saying what she wants to do with it.
-
A federal judge says Wisconsin voters with disabilities can get help returning their ballots, despite a state Supreme Court ruling and state laws that suggest otherwise.
-
Republican Assembly Speaker Robin Vos has fired Michael Gableman, the former Wisconsin Supreme Court justice he hired to investigate the 2020 election, just three days after the lawmaker beat a primary opponent the investigator had endorsed and campaigned for.
-
Tomorrow is the partisan primary election here in Wisconsin. While many people have already voted, others will be headed to the polls to cast their vote for their preferred candidates for each race.
-
The Wisconsin Election Commission is mailing postcards and taking other steps to secure the absentee voting process.
-
There have been a number of changes to voting absentee due to decisions by the Wisconsin Supreme Court. Claire Woodall-Vogg, executive director of the Milwaukee Election Commission, explains what this means for Milwaukee voters.
-
Tens of thousands of people in Wisconsin have voted absentee already. What should they do if they voted for a candidate who’s dropped out of the race?
-
Last week, Republican legislators struck down a rule allowing Wisconsin election clerks to fix minor issues in witness addresses listed on absentee ballots. The move is in stark contrast with a recent ruling from the Wisconsin Election Commission allowing Republican candidate Tim Michels to remain on the ballot, despite an incomplete address listed on his paperwork.