Republican-backed Wisconsin Supreme Court Candidate Resurfaces Unproven Fraud Concerns

republicanbacked wisconsin supreme court candidate resurfaces unproven fraud concerns

The Republican-backed candidate in Wisconsin's closely watched state Supreme Court race has resurfaced long debunked concerns about voting fraud because of the late reporting of ballots in Milwaukee just two weeks before the April 1 election .

Brad Schimel, a former Republican attorney general, spoke of the possibility of "bags of ballots" and fraud in Milwaukee during an interview Tuesday on conservative talk radio. Schimel faces Democratic-backed Susan Crawford in the April 1 election with majority control of the Wisconsin Supreme Court at stake.

Schimel, in an interview on WISN-AM, said his supporters need to "get our votes banked, make this too big to rig so we don't have to worry that at 11:30 in Milwaukee, they're going to find bags of ballots that they forgot to put into the machines."

Schimel said that happened in 2018 and in November "when U.S. Senate candidate Eric Hovde was ahead all night, and then all of a sudden, Milwaukee County changed that."

Republicans and Democrats alike, along with state and Milwaukee election leaders, warned in the run-up to the November election that Milwaukee absentee ballots would be reported late and cause a huge influx of Democratic votes. Milwaukee is the state's most populated city and is heavily Democratic.