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Racine County Clerk’s Office Mum on Delay in Vote Count

Apr. 3, 2024 2:50p 

(WPR)---Election results for Racine County were still not being posted to the county website over 16 hours after polls closed Tuesday, with the county clerk’s office sharing little information on what has led to the delay.

As of early Wednesday afternoon, the election results webpage on the Racine County website only showed handwritten ward results for municipalities. In past elections in Racine County, including for the Feb. 20 primary election, the county has posted a tabulated summary report of the total votes cast.

Casey Morgenson, a spokesperson for the office of the Racine County executive, said she doesn’t “have any information on what happened.”

 

Morgenson said she doesn't know if a computer glitch led to the mix-up. However, she shared this statement from the county clerk's office: “The municipalities have to deliver all their materials to our office today. We will be taking information directly from their results tapes to enter into another reporting system so we can prepare/print cumulative reports to put on the website. I am anticipating later today, but don’t have a specific time.”

Henry Perez, who is running for reelection as an alder in the city of Racine, said he hasn’t received any updates from the clerk’s office as of 1 p.m. Wednesday. He said he heard late Tuesday night there was some sort of “malfunction” in the equipment.

“All I know is that there was an equipment malfunction, that the lists had to be totally redone and something didn’t work,” Perez said.

“It’s aggravating,” he added.

Stacy Taap, a spokesperson for the Racine Unified School District, said final results still aren’t in for four school board races across the district because of the incident.

“We have been told they are hopeful to have results later today,” Taap said in an email. 

Toni Young, who is running for election after her appointment as a Racine County circuit court judge, said she hasn’t heard any news about when totals would be in.

The vote count snafu in the county of about 196,000 residents has locals worried about what will happen in November’s presidential election, which will have far higher turnout. In 2020, President Joe Biden won the state by just over 20,000 votes. Wisconsin’s battleground state status will shine a spotlight on the vote count as it comes in.

“Good practice for it. We’ll see what happens then,” Perez said.

Editor’s note: This story will be updated.

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