Wisconsin has followed a trend across battleground states, posting much higher in-person absentee voting this year than in 2020.
Three days after in-person absentee voting started on Oct. 22, the Wisconsin Elections Commission (WEC) reported that 292,702 absentee ballots had been cast that way. The equivalent period during 2020 saw just 209,665 such ballots, meaning this year had a 39 percent surge.
“The rate of in-person absentee appears to be at a higher rate than previous elections,” said Meagan Wolfe, WEC administrator and the top authority in Wisconsin’s elections.
“Of course, it’s possible that the pace may slow in the days ahead, but the first three days of in-person absentee voting were exceedingly high.”
Wisconsin’s in-person absentee voting differs from other forms of early voting. In Georgia, for example, voters can go to early voting locations to cast ballots much as they would on Election Day.
In Wisconsin, by contrast, voters can be issued their absentee ballots in person by officials at the clerk’s office or an alternate site. They then complete the absentee ballot and submit it on-site.
In-person absentee voting ends on Nov. 3, the Sunday before Election Day, Nov. 5.
The numbers so far suggest that Republicans may be on the cusp of a strong performance in many of those crucial jurisdictions in mail-in voting and in-person early voting.
Registered Republicans also led in early ballots out of North Carolina, and in Pennsylvania, mail-in ballot numbers from Republicans were up from the comparable period in 2020.
Voters aren’t registered by party in Wisconsin.