
A ballot measure in Wisconsin that bars the use of private funds in administering elections passed on Tuesday, according to a Decision Desk HQ projection.
The ballot measure received 54 percent support, according to DDHQ, with 98 percent of the vote reported as of Wednesday morning.
The measure asked Wisconsinites if the state Constitution should be amended “to provide that private donations and grants may not be applied for, accepted, expended, or used in connection with the conduct of any primary, election, or referendum?”
A separate ballot measure in the Badger State, to amend the state Constitution to note that only designated election officials can conduct elections, also passed with close to 59 percent of the vote, according to DDHQ projections.
The first ballot measure over private funding came against the backdrop of Republican backlash after Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, donated several hundred million dollars to two groups that offered grants to local municipalities to conduct elections as they grappled with the COVID-19 pandemic during the 2020 election cycle.