Saturday, April 30, 2022

In the News - April 2022



Jay Heck on the WI Supreme Court redistricting maps decision
April 21, 2022 - Between the Lines with Greg Stensland, WFDL Radio

Wisconsin Supreme Court gerrymandered the gerrymander
April 20, 2022 - Rick Solem, WIZM's La Crosse Talk PM

State Supreme Court flips on redistricting
April 18, 2022 - Tim Kowols, Door County Daily News

State High Court’s Hyper-Partisan Ruling
April 18, 2022 - Jay Heck op-ed, Urban Milwaukee

Jay Heck joins Prof. Edward Fallone and Lisa Graves in a panel conversation moderated by LWVWI director, Joy Cardin .
April 14, 2022 - LWVWI, Fair Courts: What's Undermining Our Courts? (video)

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Monday, April 18, 2022

Wisconsin Supreme Court Embraces Hyper Partisanship and Polarization in Choosing State Legislative Voting Maps

 
Monday - April 18, 2022


Editorial Cartoon by Phil Hands of the Wisconsin State Journal – 6/30/19


Late on Friday afternoon, as families all over Wisconsin were making preparations for two of the most important religious observances of the year -- Easter and Passover -- or, just beginning what was hopefully a warmer, Spring weekend, the Wisconsin Supreme Court chose to release its shockingly unfair, hyper partisan, and completely misguided decision regarding the state legislative redistricting process and voting maps and set the stage for yet another decade of deeply polarized, undemocratic and unrepresentative state government in Wisconsin.

The four "conservatives" on the court committed an act of unprecedented radical judicial activism in selecting the ultra-partisan gerrymandered voting maps drawn in secret by state legislative Republicans less than six weeks after having chosen the less partisan, fairer voting maps submitted to the court by Governor Tony Evers.

The U.S. Supreme Court, on March 23rd had remanded Wisconsin's state legislative voting maps back to the Wisconsin Supreme Court for additional information, explanation and possible slight revision saying that in expanding to seven, from the current six the number of majority-minority Assembly districts in Wisconsin, the Governor needed to show more evidence that his maps did not constitute a "racial gerrymander" and were fully compliant with the Voting Rights Act. This, Evers said he was willing to do. Another way to address the concerns of the conservative majority on the U.S. Supreme Court about utilizing race-based redistricting might have been to revise only the majority-minority districts (all in the Milwaukee area) and reduce the number of them from seven in the Governor's plan, back to six. The rest of the state legislative districts drawn by Evers were not at issue and could have been left intact.

But in what may be remembered in our state as the "Good Friday Surprise Attack on Democracy," the Wisconsin Supreme Court chose another path. And it was the worst possible alternative. Conservative Justice Brian Hagedorn, who had led the court in choosing the Governor's redistricting plan because it most closely adhered to his "least change" (from the 2011 redistricting) directive, on Friday executed a 180-degree pivot, and chose the severely partisan and even more gerrymandered (than in 2011) Republican state legislative maps, dishonestly claiming the court "had no other choice." That declaration was as absurd as it was untrue.

The Wisconsin Supreme Court could have accepted and reviewed the additional evidence that Gov. Evers offered to provide about how he determined the addition of a majority-minority Assembly district in his redistricting plan. It rejected that offer. The court could have made some revisions to the composition of the majority-minority districts to address the concerns of the U.S. Supreme Court about a "race-based" redistricting scheme. It refused to do so. Instead, Justice Hagedorn joined conservative justices Annette ZieglerPatience Roggensack, and Rebecca Bradley in selecting the most unfair, hyper partisan redistricting plan available that is specifically designed to lock in absolute Republican control of the Wisconsin Legislature for the next decade and to achieve for the Republicans a veto-proof, supermajority in at least one of the two legislative chambers.

Some legal experts have said that there is very little or no precedent for a state or federal court to have made such a partisan, completely unbalanced redistricting choice as the 4 to 3 conservative majority on the Wisconsin Supreme Court made on Friday. There is no precedent for a court selecting a redistricting scheme that was legally vetoed by a Governor, ignoring that action, and then ramming it into effect, without any revision or compromise whatsoever. This will likely go down as one of the worst assaults on justice and fairness in the history of American jurisprudence.
 
Wisconsin Justice Jill Karofsky, a progressive, got it right in the dissent she wrote, and which was joined by progressive Justices Ann Walsh Bradley and Rebecca Dallet. Karofsky argued the court's majority had ignored a long history of racism in Milwaukee, one of the most segregated cities in the nation where Black residents have long faced racial disparities in homeownership, education, employment, health care and the criminal justice system. "The fault and responsibility to remedy this systemic segregation lies not with Milwaukee's residents but instead with the government and the society that perpetuated racial redlining and restrictive covenants," Karofsky wrote. "Those practices shaped Milwaukee and that history of discrimination cannot be undone by force of will alone."
 
The Governor's plan attempted to address and correct some of that disparity and injustice in expanding from six to seven the number of majority-minority Assembly districts. The Republican plan adopted by the court majority decreases to five, the number of majority minority Assembly districts and enhances racial disparity and injustice. Rather than address this issue and attempt to alleviate the problem as one might reasonably expect a fair and impartial state supreme court to do, the Wisconsin Supreme Court voted to wash its hands of any responsibility for this blight on our state. Instead, they exacerbated the problem.
 
Common Cause in Wisconsin has long advocated for and supported the adoption of a non-partisan redistricting process for Wisconsin based on our neighboring state of Iowa's 42-year-old non-partisan process with which, even with Republican state legislative majorities and a Republican Governor in power, earlier this year adopted non-partisan state legislative and congressional voting maps that were supported by almost every Democratic and Republican member in both chambers of the Iowa Legislature.
 
Contrast that process and outcome with Wisconsin's, which with this horrendous state supreme court decision, has once again earned the dubious distinction of being one of the most hyper partisan, polarized and unfairly gerrymandered state of any in the nation. And lest there be any question that this is simply a "Republican problem," it most definitely is not. Democratic legislative majorities with Democratic Governors this year rammed through hyper partisan, unfair state legislative gerrymanders in Illinois and New York every bit as egregious as the G.O.P. assault on fairness and democracy in Wisconsin.
 
The long-suffering citizens of Wisconsin clearly deserve much better than the Wisconsin Supreme Court and the Wisconsin Legislature have been willing or able to deliver. We will continue our relentless pursuit of non-partisan redistricting reform for our state for as long as it takes to achieve it. It will be up to "we the people" to make the necessary changes to restore some modicum of liberty and justice for all of us. And we cannot and will not rest until we do.
 
Onward,
Jay Heck
 
--------------------------

Jay Heck
608/256-2686 (office)
608/512-9363 (cell)

Common Cause in Wisconsin
152 Johnson St, Suite 212
Madison, WI 53703
www.commoncausewisconsin.org

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Friday, April 8, 2022

Actions You Can Take to Promote and Protect Democracy

Friday - April 8, 2022



WE Power - democracy is our common cause

You can continue to make a difference this year in Wisconsin to strengthen fair and free elections!


Thanks to each and every voter who participated in the Spring 2022 elections! Local elections have direct impacts on our lives, families, and communities. Thanks for using your personal power to make a difference and to enhance our right to vote.

Now, with our next statewide election just ahead in August, here are some exciting, upcoming opportunities for you to learn, explore, and help direct your citizen activism to preserve and protect our freedom to vote.


CALLS to ACTION (write to your government officials TODAY, which is easy to do with the Common Cause online writing tool)
  • The anti-voter legislative bills have been sent to Governor Tony Evers. He needs to veto these measures. Write to him today to thank him for defending our right to vote because he will need to act on these bills by early next week. Even if you have done this in the past on earlier voter suppression measures, it’s important that you weigh in against this latest assault on free and fair elections in Wisconsin. And it takes only a few minutes to construct and send out this important message by using this easy-to-use Common Cause letter writing tool.
  • Write to both your State Senator and your State Representative and demand a public hearing and then a vote on SB 389 and AB 395 in support of redistricting reform. While the Wisconsin Legislature has "adjourned" for the year to campaign for the 2022 elections, they could easily convene again in Extraordinary Session to consider and pass SB 389/AB 395. Demand that they do so - write to them today!


What's Undermining Our Courts? (webinar)

Common Cause Wisconsin Director, Jay Heck, joins a panel with Marquette University Law Prof. Edward Fallone and dark money expert Lisa Graves for a conversation moderated by former Wisconsin Public Radio personality Joy Cardin about how secret, dark political money and weak recusal rules are undermining our courts. The free, virtual event sponsored by LWVWI is this coming Wednesday, April 13 at Noon.

Register for the Fair Courts webinar. The recorded event will be posted on the League's website and YouTube page.


Thank Election Heroes Day (online)
 
Join Common Cause Wisconsin, many partnering organizations, and voters across the state to thank our local clerks, poll workers, and election officials for all their work for ensuring Wisconsin elections are secure, fair, free and accessible. Send your clerk a letter, email or message via social media on Tuesday, April 12 -- "Thank Election Heroes Day." Let's all come together to thank our election workers and let them know how grateful we are that they count every vote and protect our freedom to vote. A little kindness from you goes a long way toward making democracy better!
 
You can find your clerk's contact information at MyVote.wi.gov

 
VoteRiders Voter ID Clinic/10th Anniversary Party (in person event)
  
On Tuesday, April 19 at 3:00 pm CT, Vote Riders will be kicking off our first Wisconsin Voter ID Clinic for 2022 in Milwaukee! Join them to celebrate 10 years and for ID clinic to give for assistance with IDs, Social Security Cards, Birth Certificates, and more! Refreshments will be served.

Milwaukee Public Library - Central Branch
Rotary Club of Milwaukee Community Room
814 W Wisconsin Ave, Milwaukee, 53233
 
Contact Nick Ramos, Vote Rider WI Voter ID Coalition Coordinator for more information.


Prepare NOW to VOTE in August and November 2022 Elections! (vote by absentee ballot or on Election Day)

If you have moved and/or need to update your voter registration, there's no better time than right now to do that so you're ready for the next election. Go to MyVote.wi.gov and enter your address information or contact your municipal clerk. You can find more voting information at the Common Cause Wisconsin website including resources for how to get assistance and answers for your election questions.


Please take action now and participate in one or more of these opportunities to move your civic engagement from beyond just the voting booth.

Stay involved. Stay encouraged. Stay connected!

Your active engagement makes our democracy stronger and preserves our freedom to vote and have our voices heard.

Thanks, and all best to you,
Jay Heck
 
--------------------------

Jay Heck
608/256-2686 (office)
608/512-9363 (cell)

Common Cause in Wisconsin
152 Johnson St, Suite 212
Madison, WI 53703
www.commoncausewisconsin.org

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Tuesday, April 5, 2022

What You Need to Know for Today's Election

Tuesday - April 5, 2022



Make time today to vote in the 2022 Spring Election - Tuesday, April 5, 2022 - and strengthen democracy by participating in our time-honored and tested selection process. If you haven't yet voted by casting an absentee ballot, then here is how you can vote in-person today. Remember, every election matters. Polls are open from 7:00 AM to 8:00 PM.
 
The Wisconsin Election Commission put out this guidance to all voters for this election: Things to Know for the April 5, 2022 Spring Election.
 
Mail-in Absentee Ballot
If you still have a mail-in absentee ballot that was mailed to you and you have not returned it yet, be sure to hand return your completed ballot TODAY by 8PMDo NOT mail it. All ballots need to be received no later than 8pm on Election Day. Your clerk and myvote.wi.gov will have information about where you can take your ballot. Don't forget: The ballot envelope needs a witness signature and the address of the witness.
 
You can track your ballot through the official ballot tracker on MyVote. Don't see that your ballot was received? Contact your clerk for further information.
 
In-Person Voting at your Polling Location
If you are planning to vote in person at the polls, read the information below so you are prepared when you show up to vote at your polling location. Polls are open from 7:00 AM to 8:00 PM.
 
Polling Location
Polling places can change. In many communities, redistricting has occurred and where you vote now may be different than in the past. To find out where to go to cast your ballot, visit the Find My Polling Place page on the My Vote Wisconsin website and type in your address.

Registration
You can register to vote on Election Day at your polling location. Being registered to vote means being registered at your current address. You need to have lived at your current address for at least 28 days prior to Election Day in order to register to vote in that election district or ward. You'll need to bring a proof of residence document to complete your registration (this document can be shown electronically - like on your phone or tablet).

Photo ID:
You are required to show a photo ID before you vote. If you have a Wisconsin driver's license or ID card, then you’re all set. Other forms of ID work too, and it’s good to check the official list of acceptable IDs at Bring It to The Polls to make sure you have what you need.

What if you don't have an acceptable ID to vote today? You can ask for AND vote with a provisional ballot. But, for your ballot to be counted, you MUST either come back to your polling place with an acceptable form of ID before it closes at 8:00 PM on Election Day OR bring your ID to your municipal clerk's office by 4:00 PM the Friday after the election (Friday, April 8th). If you don't have an acceptable ID for voting and need help getting one, contact the Voter Helpline 608-285-2141 for assistance.
 
Your Ballot
You will find a variety of races on your ballot. These may include District Court Judges, City Council seats, Village President, County Board seats, Mayor, School Board seats and Alders. (Find out what is on your ballot at MyVote). These offices and the people who serve in these roles have direct impact on you, your family, and your community. Find out who who is running for these offices.
 
Get to know who wants to represent you and which candidate best represents your values before you vote. Find candidate and ballot information from the League of Women Voters of Wisconsin at Vote411.
 
College Students voting in Wisconsin
Students attending a university, college, or technical school in Wisconsin can find information to vote from the CC/WI webpage: Three Things College Students Need to Do To Vote in Wisconsin

Have questions or need some assistance? 
Help is just a call, text, or email away.
 
  • Call or text the WI Voter Helpline at 608-285-2141 and you will be connected to a nonpartisan person who can help answer all your questions. You can also request services such as getting assistance at the DMV to get an ID to vote or having someone witness your absentee ballot.
  • Voters with disabilities have the right to an accessible polling place. This includes the right to use an accessible voting machine, getting assistance marking a ballot, and using curbside voting. Call the Disability Rights Wisconsin Voter Hotline for assistance: 1-844-347-8683. Or email: info@disabilityvote.org. Additional online resources are also at the Wisconsin Disability Vote Coalition website.
  • Contact Vote Riders if you need immediate assistance with a photo ID to vote. You can get free, in-state ID assistance ASAP from the online form.
  • If you experience problems at the polls or have questions, there is help. Call Election Protection at 866-OUR-VOTE (866-687-8683) for support from nonpartisan election protection volunteers with questions or to report problems.
 
Be involved in state and local elections. Democracy depends on you. Go vote! And share this voting information with others today.
 
--------------------------

Jay Heck
608/256-2686 (office)
608/512-9363 (cell)

Common Cause in Wisconsin
152 Johnson St, Suite 212
Madison, WI 53703
www.commoncausewisconsin.org

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