Wisconsin implemented drawdowns long before election officials could operate a voting machine, train clerks online, transfer election data using USB sticks or have an electronic statewide voter registration system. They existed decades before Wisconsin election officials had modernized systems that more efficiently prevented and flagged errors.
In fact, drawdowns emerged in 1849, less than a year after Wisconsin became a state. One of the first election bills signed into law during that period called for election inspectors to "publicly draw out and destroy" the number of ballots that exceed the number of votes on the poll list.
It's unclear what lawmakers' original intent was. The records on that only go back to 1927.
Wisconsin legislators have updated the drawdown law a few times. A 1983 update differentiated absentee ballots from regular ballots, requiring that election officials draw down from a stack of the same ballot type that created the discrepancy. A 2005 law outlined the drawdown process for municipal absentee ballot canvassing, when local election officials check the number of absentee ballots against the number of voters on poll lists.
Minnesota, Florida and Michigan had similar laws or constitutional provisions soon after their founding. Those states now either hardly do drawdowns or don't have the law on their books anymore.
"The fact that it exists in Wisconsin and nowhere else, sometimes people just shake their heads at it," said Kevin Kennedy, who was Wisconsin's chief election official for over 30 years.
Kennedy was part of a legislative study committee about 20 years ago to explore whether drawdowns were a proper procedure. That committee considered whether the practice was legal at all when applied to regular, in-person ballots. It didn't come to a clear answer.
Drawdowns are a good way of addressing and resolving an issue when the practice is correctly employed, Kennedy said, like when there are more ballots than voters on poll lists at a polling place. But it's not appropriate as a possible remedy when somebody argues certain ballots shouldn't be counted, like if somebody improperly returns multiple ballots to a drop box, he explains.
Kennedy, a Madison poll worker since retiring in 2016, added that drawdowns are typically the result of poll workers making errors.
Drawdowns are a last resort in Wisconsin
At this point, drawdowns are outlined in a couple portions of state law and the state election commission's manuals.
In each mention, the basic rationale and process are almost the same: Drawdowns are considered only after election officials check for and remove any blank ballots and ballots that election inspectors didn't properly prepare.
If the number of ballots still exceeds the number of voters following those checks are complete, election officials randomly remove the number of ballots required to make the ballot count equal to the voter count. State law requires those ballots to be set aside, not counted, and properly preserved.
In Madison and surrounding Dane County, drawdowns typically result from election officials initially not catching errors on absentee ballot envelopes, said Dane County Clerk Scott McDonell, a Democrat.
Mistakes on those envelopes, including the lack of a witness signature, could be caught later at a municipal or county canvass meeting, or during a recount, McDonell said.
The last time Freiburg recalled a drawdown in Fond du Lac County was in 2016, when the Green Party petitioned for a recount after the presidential election.
In that election, Freiburg said, several ballots had to be drawn down because a municipal election official misplaced several absentee ballot envelopes.
"I think we were seven or eight short," Freiburg said. "We called her. She claimed she had given everything to us. Finally, we had to draw down the ballots."
That wasn't the end of the story. After the recount was complete, Freiburg said, the municipal official found the missing envelopes. But votes had already been drawn down.
"It was like, OK, now it's too late," Freiburg said.
An election official has reservations about drawdowns
No centralized database tracks every Wisconsin drawdown, leaving unclear how many elections and votes they affect. But several longtime county clerks across the state told Votebeat that the practice most often comes up during recounts, when voting records and ballots are closely scrutinized and contested.
After his loss in 2020, Trump requested a recount in Dane and Milwaukee counties, the state's two biggest and most heavily Democratic counties.
During that recount, 36 ballots were drawn down in Westport, a small town just north of Madison, because of absentee ballot certificates that either had missing witness addresses or signatures of the voter or witness. Joe Biden lost 28 votes and Trump lost eight. (In Westport's overall voting, Biden got just over 1,900 votes to Trump's 1,100, though the drawdowns came out of a stack of absentee ballots, which tend to skew more Democratic.)
During the recount process, Bob Anderson, the town's deputy clerk, said he realized he'd signed off on one of the challenged absentee ballot certificates that had missing information in the address field.
Anderson said that he asked the Dane County Board of Canvassers, which was overseeing the recount process, not to discard a vote over that omission. The board upheld the objection to it, however, authorizing a ballot to be drawn down for that error, he said.
"I was disappointed," he said. "You'd like everybody's vote to count, certainly. And if it's some kind of administrative [error] that we're willing to own up to, it doesn't seem right."
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