Wisconsin vote fraud revealed
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With Wisconsin’s high-stakes elections looming on Tuesday, April 1, an election integrity group has dropped a bombshell that could shake the foundations of the state’s voting system. Fair Elections Wisconsin (FEW), a grassroots watchdog, has identified 4,878 allegedly illegal voter registrations on Milwaukee’s voter rolls—registrations that cast ballots in the November 2024 election. This revelation comes just days before pivotal contests for the Wisconsin Supreme Court and a constitutional amendment to cement voter ID requirements into law.
FEW President Justin Gavery took the fight directly to the Milwaukee Election Commission on Wednesday, March 26, submitting a detailed list of these questionable registrations. The group demanded action, but their efforts hit a brick wall. The commission, tasked with overseeing the integrity of Milwaukee’s elections, declined to investigate the claims, leaving the allegations unresolved as the state barrels toward another critical vote.
The scope of the problem is staggering. According to FEW’s analysis of Wisconsin Elections Commission (WEC) data cross-checked with the United States Postal Service’s National Change of Address records, 281 voters had moved out of Milwaukee County before October 24, 2024, and 377 had left the state entirely by that date. Yet, these individuals remained on the voter rolls and participated in the November election.
Digging deeper, FEW uncovered a litany of irregularities. Among the 4,878 challenged registrations, 2,926 listed addresses with missing or incorrect apartment, suite, or unit numbers—details required under WEC rules, which mandate that voters provide their complete and current residential address. Another 540 voters had moved from their registered address, while 501 had shifted their physical addresses to P.O. boxes, a questionable practice for establishing residency.
The irregularities didn’t stop there. FEW found 217 voters who left no forwarding address before the October cutoff, 24 who registered using commercial addresses like UPS or FedEx stores, and 11 who listed a U.S. Post Office as their residence. These findings paint a troubling picture of a voter roll riddled with errors—or worse, potential fraud.
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The Milwaukee Election Commission comes across as indifferent at best to the potential evidence of vote fraud in their area. The US DOJ should be investigating the potential vote fraud in the area.
See also:
North Carolina Appeals Court Rules Over 60K Voters Must Verify Eligibility
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