Republican vows 'forensic examination' of Wisconsin ballots despite no evidence of widespread fraud

Associated Press
Wisconsin State Rep. Janel Brandtjen, center, Eric Greitens, second from left, and Wisconsin State Rep. Dave Murphy, left, watch as Maricopa County ballots from the 2020 general election are examined and recounted by contractors hired by the Arizona Senate on June 12 at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Phoenix.

MADISON – The Republican head of the Wisconsin Assembly elections committee said Monday she would ensure there is a “comprehensive, forensic examination” of ballots cast in the 2020 presidential election in Wisconsin at the same time the state’s nonpartisan audit bureau conducts a review.

The broadened investigation comes amid pressure from former President Donald Trump and other national Republicans to take a closer look in Wisconsin, a state President Joe Biden won by just over 20,000 votes.

There is no evidence of widespread fraud and courts rejected numerous lawsuits filed by Trump and his allies attempting to overturn the outcome. Democrats have derided calls for more investigations as feeding into conspiracy theories and lies that Trump actually won the state.

One of the loudest critics of how the election was run is Rep. Janel Brandtjen of Menomonee Falls, chair of the Assembly elections committee who led a delegation of GOP lawmakers to observe a widely discredited election audit in Arizona.

She said in a statement Monday that her committee would request additional materials to conduct a deeper review in Wisconsin.

The committee’s investigation is in addition to a review ordered by Republican Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, being done by three retired police detectives and overseen by a former Wisconsin Supreme Court justice, and the independent review by the audit committee.

Another separate, independent investigation is being done by several individuals convinced there was widespread fraud in Wisconsin, despite no evidence. That effort is being led by Peter Bernegger, who was convicted of mail fraud and bank fraud in federal court in Mississippi in 2009.

“The people of Wisconsin deserve to know the truth about the 2020 election,” Brandtjen said in a statement. She said her committee will look into “broader issues that have been raised” in the “most transparent and coordinated way possible.”

Trump’s loss to Biden in Wisconsin withstood a partial recount ordered by Trump in Milwaukee and Dane counties, the two most heavily Democratic counties.

The Republican-controlled Legislature subsequently passed bills to make it more difficult to vote absentee in Wisconsin, measures that Democratic Gov. Tony Evers plans to veto.

Trump himself has been putting pressure on Wisconsin Republicans. Last month he called out the three highest-ranking Republican legislative leaders, saying they were “working hard to cover up election corruption.” The Wisconsin Republicans said Trump was misinformed, but they have also facilitated more reviews of the election outcome.

There are almost no documented cases of election fraud in Wisconsin.

Two people have been charged with election fraud, out of more than 3 million votes cast in the state, and prosecutors are still reviewing a handful of other cases that were among 27 forwarded to them by election officials. Similarly, very few potential voter fraud cases have been identified in Arizona where the type of audit envisioned by Brandtjen was done.

Brandtjen repeated concerns raised by Trump and his allies about absentee voting by people who said they were “indefinitely confined,” which under state law meant they did not have to show a photo ID to obtain their ballot, and about election officials filling in missing information on the envelopes that contained absentee ballots. That practice was done for prior elections under guidance from the Wisconsin Elections Commission.

More:Bills to change voting rules have been moving through the Legislature. Here are the views of local election clerks.

She also raised concerns about how ballot-counting machines work, a longtime GOP talking point. Random audits required under state law, that Republicans pushed for, have not shown any significant issues with the operation of ballot-counting machines in Wisconsin.

“Voters have made it clear that they want a thorough, cyber-forensic examination of tabulators, ballot marking devices and other election equipment, which I will be helping facilitate,” Brandtjen said.

Democratic state Rep. Mark Spreitzer, D-Beloit, said Brandtjen was “reviving dead conspiracy theories and making up new ones about tabulation machines.”

“Wisconsin deserves better than right-wing extremists pretending to have insight into elections that they lost,” Spreitzer tweeted.