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On November 18, the Trump campaign wired nearly $3 million to the Wisconsin Election Commission in a petition for a partial recount of the 2020 presidential election results. The recount would take place in Milwaukee and Dane counties. "These two counties were selected because they are the locations of the worst irregularities," the campaign ...
In the 2020 presidential election, Democrat Joe Biden won Wisconsin, defeating Trump by 0.62 percentage points. During the 2021 United States Electoral College vote count, 36 members of the House of Representatives objected to the certification of Wisconsin's electoral votes because of unsubstantiated claims of election fraud, but the objection ...
The 2020 Wisconsin Fall general election was held in the U.S. state of Wisconsin on November 3, 2020. All of Wisconsin's eight seats in the United States House of Representatives were up for election, as well as sixteen seats in the Wisconsin State Senate and all 99 seats in the Wisconsin State Assembly .
↩️ Past election history. The results of the last three presidential elections in Wisconsin are as follows: 2020: Joe Biden (D) defeated Donald Trump (R) by 0.63% 2016: Donald Trump (R ...
The 2011 Wisconsin Spring Primary was held February 15, 2011. [1] 2011 also saw the first set of recall elections incited by Governor Scott Walker's controversial 2011 Wisconsin Act 10, which stripped public employee unions of their collective bargaining rights. Nine state senators faced recall in the Summer of 2011, with two Republican seats ...
If you take all the states and put them in order from most Democratic in the 2020 election to most Republican, then count up their electoral votes, Wisconsin was the state that provided Biden with ...
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 2020 Wisconsin Election Results, Dec. 2, 2020. Phone call and email exchange, Nathan Schwantes, chief of staff for Secretary of State, March 14 and 25, 2024.
Apart from its first two presidential elections as a state, Wisconsin was heavily Republican throughout the entirety of the late 1800s and into the early 1900s - voting Democratic in presidential elections only 1892, 1912, 1948, and for Franklin D. Roosevelt from 1856 to 1960.