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Limits on noncitizen voting: What to know about Wisconsin’s Nov. 5 referendum

The measure would amend language in the Wisconsin Constitution that limits voting to US citizens

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On Election Day, April 4, 2023, pedestrians walk past a “Vote Here” sign at the entrance to the Memorial Union at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, one of several official polling places for UW–Madison students living on campus. Althea Dotzour/UW–Madison

A statewide proposal on the Nov. 5 ballot would amend language in the Wisconsin Constitution that limits voting to U.S. citizens.

Here’s what voters need to know.

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What would the amendment change?

Wisconsin’s Constitution already requires voters to be U.S. citizens through language that specifies, “Every United States citizen age 18 or older who is a resident of an election district in this state is a qualified elector of that district.”

But, if the proposed amendment is approved by Wisconsin voters, the word “every” in that section would be changed to “only.”

It would also add a clause, spelling out that Wisconsin’s citizenship requirement applies to local, state and federal elections.

What are supporters saying about the proposal?

Under federal law, it’s already a crime for noncitizens to vote in federal elections. Wisconsin laws also require voters to be U.S. citizens, and the state’s voter registration form requires someone to check a box affirming that they’re a U.S. citizen.

But supporters of the amendment say the constitutional change would ensure Wisconsin’s voter citizenship requirement remains ironclad.

And they say the revisions would close a “loophole” that could eventually enable Wisconsin localities to allow noncitizens to vote in local races.

Although no jurisdictions in Wisconsin allow noncitizens to vote, there are more than a dozen communities in other states that let noncitizens vote in local elections, such as mayoral and school board races. All of the communities that allow noncitizen voting at the local level are in Maryland, California, Vermont or the District of Columbia.

Even if local officials in Wisconsin wanted to let noncitizens vote on local races or proposals, it’s not clear whether current state law would allow that change, according to analysis from the State Democracy Research Initiative at the University of Wisconsin Law School.

“Courts  in other states have reached divergent conclusions about whether provisions akin to Wisconsin’s current constitutional text allow municipalities to authorize local noncitizen voting,” the analysis noted.

Nonetheless, while speaking in favor of the plan on the floor of the state Assembly last year, state Rep. Tyler August, R-Walworth, said Wisconsin should act to foreclose that possibility.

“Unfortunately, across the country, we have seen instances where local municipalities have decided to grant the right to vote, again that sovereign right for American citizens … to noncitizens,” August said. “When it comes to that sacred constitutional right, it should be U.S. citizens determining the future of their local municipality, their state, their school boards.”

What are the arguments against the amendment?

Wisconsin Family Action, a conservative organization, registered in favor of the proposal as it made its way through the Legislature. The groups that registered against it included Wisconsin’s League of Women Voters and Wisconsin Conservation Voters.

Critics say the changes are unnecessary, since Wisconsin already bans noncitizens from voting.

“It’s redundant,” said Jarret English, the political director for the immigrant rights group Voces de la Frontera. “It’s designed to scapegoat BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color) and immigrant communities.”

At the same time, opponents have argued the amendment could weaken voting rights by changing constitutional language about voter eligibility from “every” to “only.”

Currently, Wisconsin’s Constitution grants the right to vote to “every” adult U.S. citizen, although the Constitution spells out two exceptions — people convicted of felonies and people who’ve been declared mentally incompetent by a court.

Tim Muth, a senior attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin, argues the amendment could make it easier for state lawmakers to restrict other groups of people from voting.

“The language in our constitution … currently says every citizen has this right,” Muth said. “It’s an inclusive provision. If you take away that provision, there is at least the possibility that a future Legislature might say, ‘Well, we want to, for example, prohibit people who have been convicted of misdemeanors from voting for a period of time.’”

Muth and other critics say the amendment could also help set the stage for Wisconsin officials to pass additional rules in the future, such as requiring voters to provide documentation that proves their citizenship.

At the federal level, the Republican-controlled U.S. House of Representatives has passed a bill that would require Americans to provide proof of citizenship when registering to vote. That proposal hasn’t cleared the Democratic-led U.S. Senate.

“How many of you got your birth certificate locked and loaded and ready to go?” Nick Ramos, executive director of the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign, asked during a news conference in which groups spoke out against the ballot measure. “You’re going to continue to move the goal post farther and farther for eligible U.S. citizens who are already voting and should be allowed to vote. It’s not fair.”

April Winfield, left, shows her ID before voting Tuesday, April 2, 2024, at the Beloit Public Library in Beloit, Wis. Angela Major/WPR

What’s the national context surrounding this referendum?

Starting in 2018, voters in half a dozen states have approved changes to their state constitutions to explicitly ban voting by noncitizens. Similar proposals are on the ballot this November in eight states, including Wisconsin.

Anthony Chergosky, a political scientist at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, said he doesn’t expect Wisconsin’s referendum on voter eligibility to substantially drive turnout in the closely fought November election. Instead, he thinks Wisconsinites will be focused on races for the presidency and U.S. Senate.

“My guess would be that for a lot of voters, the first time they ever become aware of the amendment will be when they see it on their ballot,” Chergosky said.

Nonetheless, Chergosky says the amendment is an important messaging tool in an election where immigration and doubts about election integrity are top issues for the GOP.

“Republicans in Wisconsin have been under tremendous pressure from their base to take action on what they perceive as the issue of election integrity,” Chergosky said.

Illegal voting by noncitizens is exceedingly rare, research has found.

But opponents of Wisconsin’s referendum worry that Republicans are focusing on citizenship requirements, as part of a plan to cast doubt on the upcoming election results.

Former President Donald Trump continues to deny that he lost the 2020 election and, this election season, he’s repeated false claims about Democrats signing up large numbers of recently arrived migrants to vote illegally.

How did this proposal get to the ballot?

Republicans who control Wisconsin’s Legislature voted to bring the proposal to the ballot. To do so, they had to approve resolutions in two consecutive legislative sessions.

The new language will be added to the Wisconsin Constitution if it’s approved by a majority of voters statewide. It does not need the approval of Democratic Gov. Tony Evers to take effect, and Evers can’t veto it.

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