Eligible Wisconsin Voters In Jail Still Face Unnecessary Hurdles To The Ballot
MILWAUKEE — All Voting is Local, the League of Women Voters of Wisconsin, and the ACLU of Wisconsin today released Ballots for All: Ensuring Eligible Wisconsinites in Jail Have Equal Access to Voting — an update to the July 2020 report, Ballots for All: Ensuring Eligible Wisconsin Voters in Jail Have Equal Access to Voting. The new report found that many jail administrators have taken small, but important, steps to increase ballot access for individuals in their care. However, troubling voting barriers persist for the approximately 13,000 people incarcerated in Wisconsin’s prisons at any given time.
In 2021, 70 percent of the 55 counties that responded indicated having policies in place compared to 47.5 percent of the 61 counties that responded in 2020. Yet, those policies did not necessarily translate to voters being able to cast a ballot that counts. Statewide, only 60 people registered from jail and 50 people voted from jail in the 2020 elections.
According to Wisconsin state law, most people incarcerated in the state do not become ineligible to vote unless they have been convicted of a felony. Of the approximately 13,000 people incarcerated in Wisconsin, at least half are eligible to vote.
“Voting is a pivotal part of our democracy and too often, people in jail have been ignored and denied their constitutional right to vote, despite being eligible to cast their ballot,” said David Carlson, smart justice regional organizer at the ACLU of Wisconsin. “While we are encouraged by the progress being made in Wisconsin jails to ensure the right of incarcerated individuals to vote is protected, more work must be done to ensure that jail voting is a standard practice, not a rare exception.”
The report makes substantial recommendations outlining steps jails can take to more sufficiently address the many barriers to the ballot for eligible Wisconsinites in county jails; outlines what legislation Wisconsin’s legislature can pass to extend voting infrastructure to serve voters in jail, and finally; provide guidance on what Wisconsin Elections Commission can provide to jail administrators and elections officials on how they can support jail-based voting.
All Voting is Local, the League of Women Voters of Wisconsin, and the ACLU of Wisconsin will host a virtual event for the public to discuss the report’s findings at Noon CT/1 p.m. ET, Wednesday, July 13 – sign up here.
Read the full report here and find the recording of today’s press briefing here.
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
Mentioned in This Press Release
Recent Press Releases by League of Women Voters of Wisconsin
League of Women Voters of Wisconsin Launches National Popular Vote Webinar Series
Apr 26th, 2022 by League of Women Voters of WisconsinThe National Popular Vote Interstate Compact bill would guarantee the Presidency to the candidate who receives the most popular votes in the nation