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politics and politicians Title: Wisconsin court race won't be certified without probe Wisconsin court race won't be certified without probe (Reuters) - The agency overseeing Wisconsin elections will not certify results of Tuesday's state Supreme Court race until it concludes a probe into how a county clerk misplaced and then found some 14,000 votes that upended the contest. Michael Haas, Government Accountability Board staff attorney, told Reuters on Friday the watchdog agency was looking into vote tabulation errors in Republican-leaning Waukesha County which gave the conservative incumbent a net gain of more than 7,000 votes -- a lead his union-backed challenger seems unlikely to surmount. "We're going to do a review of the procedures and the records in Waukesha before we certify the statewide results," Haas said. "It's not that we necessarily expect to find anything criminal. But we want to make sure the public has confidence in the results," Unofficial returns in the statewide race had given the challenger, JoAnne Kloppenburg, a narrow 204 vote statewide lead over David Prosser, a former Republican legislator. But late Thursday, the top vote counter in Waukesha County said votes she had failed to report in earlier totals resulted in a net gain of 7,582 votes for Prosser in the county. News of the uncounted votes came as officials throughout Wisconsin were conducting county canvasses, a final review of voting records that allows the state to certify this week's bitterly contested elections. The Supreme Court contest was widely seen as a referendum on Republican Governor Scott Walker and the curbs on collective bargaining he and his allies passed in the legislature. Walker has defended the union restrictions, which eliminate most bargaining rights for public sector workers and require them to pay more for benefits, as a needed fiscal reform to help the state close a budget gap. Critics saw the bill, which also eliminates automatic deduction of union dues, as a Republican attack on the single biggest source of funding for the Democratic Party. Earlier this year the struggle over the issue made Wisconsin a focal point of a national debate over labor relations, with massive protests at the state capital and protracted maneuvering in the state legislature. Several states are considering proposals similar to Wisconsin, and union supporters fear the laws curbing collective bargaining could spread across the country. If Prosser wins, Kloppenburg has the right to ask for a recount -- though based on the current tally, Wisconsin law may require she pay for it herself. In a statement, Kloppenburg said her campaign had filed an open records requests "for all relevant documentation related to the reporting of election results in Waukesha County, as well as to the discovery and reporting of the errors announced by the County." Under Wisconsin law, county clerks have until next Friday, April 15, to complete the canvass and report the results to the GAB. Poster Comment: Damn! The p word was in this title, too. I fear for the safety of any animals in yukon's vicinity.
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#1. To: Skip Intro (#0)
Skippy, when did school let out? You are such a little coward. How can you live with yourself?
I guess the word of a Democrat isn't good enough for the other Democrats......
"I love the 45 caliber M1911, I respect the 9MM M9 Beretta but I only carry a CZ for my own personal protection". Quote courtesy of Lt Col John Dean Cooper, recognized as the Father of Modern Handgunning
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