The Wisconsin Senate passed several Republican-backed bills on June 9 that would place more restrictions on absentee balloting—which GOP lawmakers have described as measures designed to safeguard elections in the state, while Democrats claim they’re designed to suppress voter turnout.
“This bill enables the voters to have another option to vote, and it’s in a secure place,” Republican Sen. Alberta Darling said about the legislation, according to WPR. “I think people care about the integrity of elections.”
Republican Sen. Duey Stroebel said that a large number of people took advantage of the “indefinitely confined” status during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“It’s important that we accommodate truly indefinitely confined voters, but unfortunately in the last election, we saw other people who weren’t truly indefinitely confined, and they were abusing that system,” Stroebel said, WPR reported.
Republican senators also voted to approve a bill that would prohibit clerks from accepting grant money and equipment from outside groups.
The measure would create a felony penalty for employees of nursing homes who try to influence a resident’s voting behavior during the election.
Democrats alleged that state Republicans are trying to suppress voters, and claimed that such restrictions were racist. Several GOP senators also joined Democrats on several of the election bills.
But Darling said her GOP colleagues aren’t attempting to overturn the 2020 election.
The measures, if approved by the state Assembly, will likely be vetoed by Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat who has previously signaled opposition to previous GOP-backed election bills. Evers has said he won’t sign anything that makes it more difficult for people to vote.