Chicago Tribune

Amid coronavirus outbreak, Wisconsin will vote Tuesday under a stay home order and a massive poll worker shortage

Thousands of poll workers have called off the job. Hundreds of voting locations have been consolidated. Tens of thousands of requests for mail-in absentee ballots are backlogged.

Wisconsin's voting system is teetering under the weight of the coronavirus pandemic, but Tuesday's election will go on as scheduled after Republican state legislative leaders, the Democratic governor and a federal judge have refused to postpone it.

Ballots will be cast even as Gov. Tony Evers has issued a "safer at home" order directing Wisconsinites only to venture outside for essential tasks such as seeking medical treatment, buying food and, apparently, voting.

"We are in an unprecedented moment, and the statutes and laws weren't written with a situation like this in mind," said Charles Franklin, a political science scholar and director of polling at the Marquette University Law School. "We have had a gigantic surge in request of absentee ballots - more than 1 million - and we have no idea at this moment how many of those will get sent out in time or how many people will show up in person on Tuesday to vote. This is uncharted water."

Wisconsin will soldier on at a time when 15 other states have either delayed their elections or switched them entirely to vote-by-mail with later deadlines.

But unlike many of those elections, Wisconsin's contest isn't just

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune3 min read
Illinois Hemp Businesses Owners Call For Regulation And Taxation, Not Prohibition
The last thing most business owners want is to be taxed and regulated, but hemp business owners are asking for just that — as a way to keep their industry alive. Hemp entrepreneurs came out Tuesday in favor of a state legislative proposal to license
Chicago Tribune3 min read
Chicago Mayor Pulls Plans To Place Migrant Shelter Site In 11th Ward After Stiff Opposition From Alderman, Property Owners
CHICAGO — Mayor Brandon Johnson announced Monday he is pulling his proposal to move migrants from downtown to a new shelter in the 11th Ward in the face of stiff opposition from Ald. Nicole Lee, the latest struggle between the administration and an i
Chicago Tribune2 min readWorld
University Of Chicago Police Clear Protest Encampment Early Tuesday, Days After President Announces Intention To Intervene
CHICAGO — University of Chicago Police cleared a pro-Palestine protest encampment in a brief raid at the South Side university early Tuesday morning, organizers said. About 50 UCPD officers began dismantling tents and makeshift barriers surrounding t

Related Books & Audiobooks