New Wisconsin law seeks to prevent certification disaster
Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers on Wednesday signed a bill bringing Wisconsin in line with a federal law seeking to prevent the kind of post-election chaos that President Donald Trump and his allies sowed after the 2020 election.
The Democrat also vetoed a Republican-authored bill that would have required the state election commission to hear administrative complaints against itself alleging violations of the federal Help America Vote Act, in line with a U.S. Justice Department demand for the state. That vetoed bill also would have required the states Legislative Audit Bureau to conduct audits for potential noncitizen voters.
The bill Evers signed updates Wisconsins deadlines for certifying presidential election results and casting electoral votes to match federal timelines set by Congress in 2022, after President Donald Trump claimed to have won the 2020 election and hundreds of individuals stormed the U.S. Capitol to prevent certification of President Joe Bidens victory.
The mismatch led to a lawsuit in the 2024 presidential election, when the states Republican electors were uncertain which day to cast their Electoral College votes because state and federal law set the dates one day apart. The new law resolves that discrepancy.
https://wisconsinwatch.org/2026/04/wisconsin-election-certification-law-vote-evers-veto-citizen-complaint-bill/