Three Airtight Charges Supporting the (Hopeful) Coming Exile of Wisconsin's Wolfe
Topic: Elections
The Wisconsin Republican Party, even in my relatively short period of closely tracking politics, has transformed from being an effective, grassroots-driven political machine that brought about some positive reforms, such as many of Scott Walker’s policies, while coexisting with the Southeastern Wisconsin establishment, to a downtrodden group of Trump-hating establishmentarians who say one thing, but do another. With Robin Vos, Speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly, in the most powerful Republican statewide position since Tony Evers took over the governorship in 2019, the party has had its ass handed to it by Democrats on multiple fronts. It appears to specialize in snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.
Yes, you may be thinking the same thing I’m thinking. Why would a party oppose the man who is the only presidential nominee from that party to win their state since 1984?
Deep down inside, you know the answer. That is because it’s a big club, and you ain’t in it, and neither are your choices for any positions of influence within your wing of the Uniparty, whether that comes down to Adam Steen, Tim Ramthun, Leah Vukmir, James Tesauro, or anyone else in the Badger State who is tired of the same old nonsense. Fortunately for the rest of us, Wisconsin has tireless election integrity leaders, such as Ramthun and Tesauro, or Erin Yager, Jim Swenson, Jefferson Davis, Harry Wait, and Peter Bernegger, who may have finally succeeded in turning the entire rat-filled, creaking vessel to a positive azimuth.
The pressure placed on the Vichy GOP faction in Wisconsin, which only increased after the Gableman investigation wrapped, has not only made it clear that the 2020 election was a farce, but has prompted a surprising move that is perhaps intended to allow the Republican establishment to save face with a grassroots base they can’t win without: they are in the process of unceremoniously canning Meagan Wolfe from her position as administrator of the Wisconsin Elections Commission. A 3-1 vote, recommending her ouster, was moved out of a Senate committee yesterday for an upcoming Senate floor vote.
While I had mentioned former Governor Walker in a positive light at the beginning of this piece, he also had a few key fumbles in his tenure as Wisconsin’s chief executive. Not only did he limp away after Milwaukee worked its overtime magic in the 2018 gubernatorial election with nary a fight, he also signed a bill that created the Wisconsin Elections Commission in 2015. Wolfe became the administrator of that radioactive organization in 2019, and presided over the 2020 debacle, which showed a stout Trump lead for the duration of the actual Election Night, which faded away gradually before imploding in one massive 3:45 AM ballot dump that went 85% for Joe Biden, and oh, what do you know, no more votes to count, have a nice day!
Wisconsin was called for Biden when America woke up November 4, 2020, along with neighboring Michigan, which fell in the same manner. As predicted, with Wolfe’s reign now in jeopardy, the regime-defending media have circled the wagons. Democracy Docket, realizing the game is up, magnified the voices of Democrat leadership, who not so surprisingly oppose the move and in strokes of irony, decry it as illegal, as if those who suffered blatantly illegal pushes for mail-in ballots in response to a man-made pandemic should suddenly find a conscience and back down.
The vote to remove Wolfe is expected to take place Thursday, September 14, barring any unforeseen surprises. The termination of this insufferable bureaucrat is long overdue, and here are three very good reasons her departure is a welcome thing:
I. Accountability for 2020
Wolfe is responsible for everything the WEC does or fails to do, much like the responsibility assigned to a military commander for the actions of his troops. The WEC mailed absentee ballot requests to all voters in 2020, and also altered voting procedures for nursing homes, which happened to turn up a not-insignificant volume of voter fraud, as snuffed out by Racine County’s Sheriff Christopher Schmaling.
Ballot harvesting gangs, also known as “mules,” were prevalent in major urban areas like Milwaukee, artificially turning out the vote that didn’t care to get out and vote for a candidate who didn’t campaign, in a state that had a Republican trend for more than a decade, and then a record number of net new Republican votes for Trump ready to roll in 2020. Dane County, home to metro Madison, piled on with “Democracy in the Park” to harvest even more votes that were illegally cast by the thousands.
II. Elections Have Rules
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