The epoch times

Courts to Determine Future of Wisconsin Election Chief

The twists and turns continued in the saga of the ⁤rise and potential fall of Wisconsin Election ⁤Commission Director‌ Meagan Wolfe.

The latest chapter ‍was a four-hour-long public⁤ hearing conducted by ⁢the state Senate Committee on Shared Revenue, Elections, and Consumer Protection held ⁤on Aug. 29.

The ⁣proceeding was the⁤ prelude to the full ​Senate convening on ⁣Sept. ⁣11 to act on ⁣retaining or replacing Ms. Wolfe.

Election integrity firebrand and State Assemblywoman Janelle Brandtjen ⁣(R-Menomonee Falls), who was the first witness ​to speak at ⁢the ⁢hearing, told The Epoch⁤ Times before the meeting, “There is no appetite among the Republican supermajority ‍in‌ the Senate⁢ to ⁢keep her in the ⁣job.

“By ⁤law, as⁤ of Aug. 15,⁤ she should have been gone.”

According to‌ state statute, that’s the day by ⁢which the Wisconsin Election Commission ⁣(WEC) is required⁤ to appoint a‌ director ⁤and send their choice on for‍ the advice and consent ​of the state senate.

A failure to do so within the requisite 45 days gives⁤ a joint committee of the‍ legislature the ⁢duty to appoint an interim director⁣ for one year.

WEC met just prior to⁣ June 30—the expiration⁤ date‌ of Wolfe’s original ⁤four-year term—but could not agree on her reappointment.

Wisconsin’s top⁤ election official, Meagan Wolfe, speaks⁣ during a ‌virtual press conference on Nov. 4, 2020. (Wisconsin State Handout via⁢ Reuters)

The body, composed by law of three ⁢Republicans and three Democrats, ‌could only muster‍ three votes ⁤to move her appointment on ‌to the⁤ Senate for confirmation. ⁤Four votes were required.

Going ⁤into that WEC meeting all six members ⁢had expressed that Ms. Wolfe had done a good job.

When it came time to vote, Ms.‍ Wolfe received the votes of all ‍three ⁣Republican commissioners, but the three Democrats ​abstained.

From Golden ⁢Girl to Goat

At the Aug. 29 hearing, Republican‍ committee member Senator Romaine ​Quinn asked why the Democrats did not vote to move Ms. ⁤Wolfe’s‌ appointment forward.

“Because ‌the‌ Democrats on the Wisconsin Election Commission know and said that she could not survive a Senate⁣ confirmation ⁢vote,” ​answered⁤ witness Justice Michael Gableman, a former 10-year veteran of⁤ the‍ Wisconsin ⁢State Supreme ‍Court and a former election ⁢integrity special investigator ⁤for‍ the ⁤state assembly.

Witness Cheryl Lynch agreed, telling the ​committee: “The Democrat⁤ members of WEC have acted to protect Wolfe from coming before the Senate⁢ for confirmation.”

Ms. Lynch added that in‌ one short term, Ms. Wolfe has “undermined ⁤the fairness‍ of⁢ Wisconsin ‌elections,” ‍and ‌has gone from a unanimous appointment by WEC and a unanimous ‍confirmation⁣ vote ⁢by the Senate in 2019 ⁢to ⁤the⁤ point where she “has⁣ ceased ⁢to be⁤ respected.”

Ms. Wolfe was invited but chose not to attend the hearing.

She did not respond to a request for comment from The ⁤Epoch⁢ Times by press time.

Strategy⁤ Explained

A Democrat ‍member of the committee, Senator Mark Spreitzer, shed light​ on the thinking behind the parliamentary maneuver of the WEC Democrats.

Mr. Spreitzer asserted‌ that since Ms. Wolfe ​failed‌ to receive the four⁣ votes needed for reappointment “no nomination⁢ has been made”⁢ and therefore the⁣ subject​ should ‍not be taken up by the committee.

His point of order was overruled by committee chairman Daniel Knodl (R-Germantown) who explained that the committee was acting on a process laid out by a Senate resolution ⁤and that the hearing would proceed.

“We⁢ will not abdicate the Senate’s authority,” Mr. Knodl said.

Acknowledging that the Republican majority disagreed with his​ assertion, Mr. Spreitzer said he feared the matter would have to be resolved through​ a lawsuit.

“I am confident the courts will side with Meagan Wolfe,” he said ​to the ⁤committee.

Reminding the meeting that there were four‍ elections⁤ scheduled in 2024, Mr. Spreitzer said he thought⁤ it advantageous that the experienced Ms. ​Wolfe continue as WEC’s director.

A ⁣Matter of Semantics

Mr. Spreitzer also stated that in Wisconsin ⁣the ⁢“expiration ⁤of⁤ a term is not the same as the ⁤creation of a vacancy. The expiration⁢ of a defined term no longer creates a vacancy.”

No vacancy means no ⁣nomination and⁢ no⁣ nomination means there is ⁤nobody for the Senate to confirm or not​ confirm, according to Mr. ⁤Spreitzer.

He⁤ cited⁢ a recent State Supreme Court decision involving a Republican Dept. of Natural Resources appointee as precedent.

The definition of the word “vacancy” looms large in the Wolfe appointment because the governing statute reads in pertinent part: ⁤”If⁤ a vacancy occurs in the‍ administrator‍ position, the commission shall appoint a new administrator, and ⁤submit the appointment for senate confirmation, no later than 45 ‌days after‌ the date of the vacancy.”

However, the same⁢ section of⁤ the same statute ‌also states that the administrator “shall serve for a​ four-year term ⁢expiring July 1 of the odd-numbered‌ year.”

In⁣ the​ days​ prior to the hearing, Wisconsin’s Democrat Attorney General‍ Josh Kaul weighed in with ‍a⁢ letter stating that, ⁣in his opinion,⁤ there was‌ no legal ⁢basis for the Senate to act in‌ regard to ‍Wolfe’s continuing ⁤tenure.

Mr. Spreitzer’s opinion was further bolstered by the comments⁣ of Ann Jacobs, a Democrat member of WEC and an attorney, who appeared before the committee in her personal capacity and not her official capacity.

Ms. Jacobs ⁤told ‍the committee that in the six volumes​ of Wisconsin statutes, “vacancy has ⁢a⁤ definition‍ with ‌14 ⁢subparts.”

She urged the​ committee to “focus on the statutes ⁤as written,”⁣ and agreed with Mr. ‍Spreitzer‍ that there is “not a nomination before this⁤ committee.”

“Administrator Wolfe has not died. There is⁣ no vote​ to remove her,” Ms. Jacobs said.

According to the WEC Democrats’ view, ​because those two things ‍have ​not occurred, and Ms. ⁤Wolfe has not resigned, she ⁢may⁣ continue in office⁤ indefinitely.

“It was certainly not the original intent of⁤ the⁣ legislature for a WEC ​director ⁤to sit in office in perpetuity,” said Mr.‍ Quinn.

After ⁤listening to ‌the remarks of Director Joe ‌Chrisman of ‌the Legislative Audit Bureau ​who summarized for the committee ‌the thirty problems ⁤his‍ agency found⁢ with the WEC’s administration of​ the 2020 election—most‌ of ‌which,



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