By Melanie Conklin | Wisconsin Examiner, April 29, 2021
The Wisconsin Constitution guarantees that every U.S. citizen 18 and over is a qualified elector, however nowhere does it specifically state that only U.S. citizens are qualified to vote in state or local elections.
That is a problem that needs to be addressed, according to Sen. Roger Roth (R-Appleton) and Assembly Majority Leader Jim Steineke (R-Kaukauna), who are currently circulating a resolution seeking to amend the state constitution so it “provides clarity that a qualified elector is only a U.S. citizen for the purpose of all elections and ballot measures in Wisconsin.”
In a memo circulating on the resolution, the lawmakers wrote, “Recently, some states and municipalities throughout the country have made movements to dilute the rights of U.S. Citizens by extending the scope of qualified electors to non-citizens, despite having constitutional language similar to that of our state.”
Federal law, passed in 1996, explicitly requires U.S. citizenship to vote in national elections, but does not address state and local voting. No state constitutions explicitly allow noncitizens to vote in state or local elections, according to Ballotpedia.
“It is vitally important that we as elected officials do what we can to protect the sanctity and integrity of our elections,” said Steineke. “This commonsense proposal has already been adopted in red states and blue states alike and will only improve voter confidence in our elections moving forward.”
Attorney Jon Sherman, senior counsel at the Fair Elections Center in Washington, D.C., says, “It’s to shut down municipalities (or states) from permitting non-citizens to vote in local elections. Not much risk of this happening for federal and state elections in Wisconsin.” He adds that, “When the country was younger, it was very common to permit immigrants who were not yet U.S. citizens to vote.”
Wisconsin is one of 14 states that does not specifically prohibit foreigners from voting in state or local elections, according to Joshua Douglas, an associate professor of law at the University of Kentucky College of Law. His research concluded that municipalities can expand voting rights for local elections so long as there are no explicit impediments. Currently the only places non-citizens can vote are 10 local jurisdictions in Maryland and in school board elections in San Francisco.
According to the Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau analysis on this measure, every United States citizen age 18 or older who is a resident of an election district in Wisconsin can vote in that district. The law defines a “qualified elector” as an individual who is eligible to vote in Wisconsin, so long as they abide by other requirements, such as voter registration.
In November, voters in Colorado, Florida and Alabama overwhelmingly passed ballot measures affirming that only U.S. citizens 18 and older can vote, backed by the pro-Trump group Citizen Voters, Inc., which is led by a former Missouri legislator, according to the Associated Press. Prior to those ballot measures, North Dakota and Arizona were the only states with specific prohibitions against noncitizens voting in local elections in the state constitutions.