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What America Do We Want to Be?

Join Living Room Conversations, our civil dialogue partner, and America Indivisible for a nationwide conversation on April 13, Thomas Jefferson’s 276th birthday. "Reckoning with Jefferson: A Nationwide Conversation on Race, Religion, and the America We Want to Be" will be held via in-person and online video discussions. Sign up today!

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On Tuesday, voters in Wisconsin approved two constitutional amendments concerning state and local elections.

The Details: The measures, endorsed by Republicans and widely opposed by Democrats, restrict the ability of non-government entities to both inject private funding into elections and to oversee election processes. The first amendment bans the use of private funds for administering elections, which passed with approximately 54% support. Question 2, restricting non-designated election officials' roles in conducting elections, received about 59% support.

For Context: These amendments come as a response to donations made by Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, to aid local jurisdictions in managing elections during the 2020 pandemic. Amidst backlash from Republican voices, these amendments address concerns about alleged efforts used to tip the electoral scales in favor of Democrats in the pandemic-impacted 2020 elections. The Federal Elections Commission dismissed a complaint in 2022 about Zuckerberg and his wife's donations.

How the Media Covered It: The Hill (Center bias) provided a broader national perspective by referring to existing restrictions on private election funding in other states. The Associated Press (Lean Left bias) analyzed the voting patterns associated with both ballot measures. Breitbart News (Right bias) framed the approval of these measures as a victory against attempts to control elections with private funding, emphasizing the controversial funding from Mark Zuckerberg in the last elections. It also provided Republican reactions, portraying their satisfaction with these measures. This summary was developed with the help of AllSides' AI technology.

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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 ā€œto 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?ā€ 

The Associated Press was able to determine that voters in Wisconsin had approved two constitutional amendments limiting how state elections are run and paid for after the measures supported by Republicans in the state outperformed former President Donald Trump’s 2020 performance, even in largely Democratic-leaning parts of the state.

Wisconsin voters approved an amendment on Tuesday night, banning the private funding of elections in the swing state.

The amendment directs that ā€œdonations and grants may not be applied for, accepted, expended, or used in…connection with the conduct of any primary, election, or referendum,ā€ according to the question phrasing that the Wisconsin State Legislature listed. Associated Press election results showed the ballot question passed by a 54.4 percent to 45.6 percent vote.