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Saturday, April 27, 2024

State

Counties across the state are slated to finish a recount of the state’s general election results by next week, the state Elections Commission said Monday.
STATE NEWS

Counties slated to finish recount by deadline

All counties are on track to report their recount results by the federally mandated Dec. 13 deadline, the state said Monday. Dane County Clerk Scott McDonell also released a statement earlier in the day detailing the progress of the recount in Dane County. “We are one-third of the way through the number of days we have to conduct the recount and we are slightly ahead of schedule with over 100,000 ballots counted to date,” McDonell said.


County clerk offices statewide are beginning a recount of Wisconsin’s general election results.
STATE NEWS

General election recount officially begins in Wisconsin

The unprecedented recount of the state’s almost 3 million presidential ballots by the Wisconsin Elections Commission began Thursday, after it was formally requested by Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein, who raised concerns of fraud or error. The first day of the recount, which is expected to take just under two weeks, has proceeded smoothly thus far, according to the Elections Commission.


The Republican Party of Wisconsin filed a complaint with the Federal Elections Commission Wednesday alleging Hillary Clinton and Jill Stein coordinated their advocacy of a recount of Wisconsin’s general election results.
STATE NEWS

Wisconsin GOP alleges coordination in recount between Clinton, Stein campaigns

The Republican Party of Wisconsin alleged unlawful coordination between the campaigns of Hillary Clinton and Jill Stein Wednesday as the state begins its general election recount. In a complaint filed with the Federal Elections Commission, the state party asked for the commission to begin an investigation into whether campaign finance laws are violated by the two campaigns in efforts to reaffirm the validity of Election Day ballots.


STATE NEWS

Recount to start Thursday; Stein request for hand tabulation denied

A recount of Wisconsin’s general election results will start Thursday as scheduled after Green Party candidate Jill Stein paid the requisite $3.5 million before Tuesday’s deadline. Counties will not be required to tabulate the results by hand, however, as Dane County Circuit Court Judge Valerie Bailey-Rihn denied a request Wednesday from Stein’s campaign for a hand recount.


STATE NEWS

Election recount to start Thursday as Stein sues to force hand-counting of votes

The Wisconsin Elections Commission released a timeline Monday detailing the chain of events that will take place for a presidential recount in the state, with counties slated to begin tabulating votes Thursday. Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein has spearheaded an effort to recount the votes in swing states Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania after a stunning win in all three by Republican President-elect Donald Trump.


Daily Cardinal
STATE NEWS

Wisconsin legislative districts ruled unconstitutional

A federal court ruled Monday that Wisconsin’s Republican-drawn legislative districts were unconstitutional, a major victory for state Democrats after losses at the polls on Election Day two weeks ago. A three-judge panel of federal justices ruled 2-1 that the state Assembly districts drawn in 2011 “were intended to burden the representational rights of Democratic voters” and boosted the ability of Republicans to retain control of the state Legislature. “Act 43 did, in fact, prevent Wisconsin Democrats from being able to translate their votes into seats as effectively as Wisconsin Republicans,” Circuit Court Judge William Ripple wrote in the decision. Ripple said the court found the discriminatory nature of the redistricting to constitute an unconstitutional instance of gerrymandering.


State Attorney General Brad Schimel filed an appeal with a federal appeals court to halt the release of Brendan Dassey, who gained notoriety in the documentary “Making a Murderer.”
STATE NEWS

Appeals court halts Dassey release

A federal court ruled Thursday that Brendan Dassey must remain imprisoned while the state appeals the decision of a lower court to overturn his conviction. Dassey, along with his uncle, Steven Avery, were found guilty of killing photographer Teresa Halbach in Manitowoc County.


STATE NEWS

Baldwin, Pocan call for policy action as Trump prepares to take office

U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., urged President-elect Donald Trump to carry through on campaign appeals to the middle class by keeping Wall Street elites out of his cabinet in a Thursday letter. “You have made a promise to ‘drain the swamp’ in Washington by reducing the influence of special interests in government and expressed deep concerns about the influence of Wall Street over government,” Baldwin wrote.


Protesters are asking the university to protect undocumented members of the UW-Madison community after the election of Donald Trump as president last week.
STATE NEWS

As undocumented students ask for university protections, legislators clash over policy

While undocumented students proactively fight to secure university protection from deportation as the president-elect’s inauguration approaches, state legislators are divided on how to move forward. Though not officially a sanctuary city, Madison’s police department follows a resolution passed by common council in 2010 discouraging MPD officers from reporting undocumented people to immigration officers, except in instances of violent crime. After a presidential campaign that emphasized deportation and wall-building, anxieties continue to rise for undocumented students as Trump gets closer to the Oval Office. A letter to university administration urging protection for students, staff and their families by making the campus a sanctuary for the undocumented has gained 4,500 signatures. Mike Mikalsen, chief of staff for state Sen.


Radio host Charlie Sykes and UW-Madison professors Kathy Cramer and Michael Wagner headlined a panel Wednesday on the aftermath of the 2016 election.
STATE NEWS

Panelists discuss media, political tenses in 2016 election

A week after the historical presidential election last week, a Washington Post reporter and Milwaukee radio host joined two UW-Madison professors Tuesday to discuss the ramifications of Donald Trump’s shocking victory. The panel was headlined by David Weigel, a political correspondent from the Washington Post, who is also the Public Affairs Writer in Residence at UW-Madison.



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