Wisconsin voters approved a ballot measure on April 1 that enshrines in the state Constitution the requirement for photo identification in order to cast a ballot.
Approximately 63 percent of voters supported the ballot measure, while about 37 percent voted against it, according to an unofficial tally by The Associated Press.
State Sen. Van Wanggaard, who co-authored the amendment, said the voter photo ID requirement will now become “the law of the land no matter the political whims of the Supreme Court or Legislature.”
The requirement for voters to show valid photo identification before casting a ballot is already mandated by state law; it was passed in 2011 and went into effect in 2016. Adding it to the state Constitution will make it more difficult for the Legislature or courts to change it in the future.
Trump celebrated the measure’s approval on his social media platform, Truth Social, on April 1, calling it a “big win for Republicans,” as he noted that Democrats had pushed back against it.
Trump narrowly lost Wisconsin to Joe Biden in the 2020 general election but defeated then-Vice President Kamala Harris in the 2024 election to claim its 10 electoral votes.
The voter ID amendment cleared its last hurdle on Jan. 14 when the Republican-controlled state Assembly voted to place the proposal on the statewide election ballot.
All Voting is Local, a voting rights nonprofit, said that enshrining the laws in the state Constitution will cause many voters to be excluded from the ballot box in future elections.
Sam Liebert, the organization’s state director, said that the voter ID requirement affected turnout among seniors, people of color, people with disabilities, and those from low-income households when it took effect in 2016.
Republican state Rep. Amanda Nedweski said that if voter photo ID was designed to suppress voting, it isn’t working, as voter turnout in the 2024 general election was the highest in Wisconsin history.
State Rep. Joel Kitchens, a Republican, told the Assembly in January that “voter ID keeps both sides honest.”
According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, 36 states require voters to present some form of identification at the polls, while 14 states and the District of Columbia do not require any documentation of identity to vote.
As of April 2024, 21 states require photo identification to vote, while 15 states accept other kinds of identification.