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Indiana’s voter ID law, which was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2008, is considered one of the most restrictive in the country. (Photo/Pexels.com)

This story was originally published by Public News Service.

By Judith Ruiz-Branch, producer
Public News Service
January 15, 2025

A proposal to make Wisconsin’s strict Voter ID law a constitutional amendment passed Wisconsin’s Republican-controlled Assembly on Tuesday.

Voters will see the proposal on the April 1 ballot. If approved, the state constitution would be amended, which would make the change much harder to repeal in the future. Proponents insist stricter ID requirements help to prevent voter fraud.

Jay Heck, executive director of Common Cause Wisconsin, and other opponents said they also provide a partisan advantage for Republicans.

“All it does is, it reduces the opportunity for certain segments of the population to be able to vote,” Heck explained. “It doesn’t do anything about preventing fraud, and it’s just a voter suppression method.”

Heck believes the measure will attract more conservatives to the polls in April. And even if voters reject the idea of changing the constitution, the state’s voter ID requirement, which is already among the strictest in the country, would remain.

The state’s voter ID law has been long debated for its prohibitive requirements. Wisconsin allows seven forms of identification to be presented at the polls but Heck pointed out they have to meet particular requirements.

“These are forms of ID that, although they seem on the surface to make some sense, they’re very difficult for some segments of the population to obtain,” Heck emphasized.

Heck added rushing to put the requirements in the state constitution is strategic, given the state Supreme Court justice ballot the measure will share. Over more than 40 years, the conservative Heritage Foundation lists only 68 cases of voter fraud in Wisconsin.

Support for this reporting was provided by The Carnegie Corporation of New York.

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