MADISON, Wis. — A local election clerk failed to realize that Wisconsin's new legislative maps moved a rural town into a new district, leading to an administrative error that could disenfranchise scores of voters in a Republican state Assembly primary race.
The new maps shifted Summit, a town of about 1,000 people in Douglas County in far northern Wisconsin, out of the 73rd Assembly District and into the 74th District. But voters in Summit received ballots for the primary in the 73rd rather than the primary in the 74th, city clerk Kaci Jo Lundgren said in a news release issued Tuesday afternoon.
Democrat Angela Stroud defeated John Adams in the primary in the 73rd. Incumbent Chanz Green and former prison guard Scott Harbridge squared off in Tuesday's primary for the GOP nomination in the 74th District.
The incorrect ballots mean votes in the 73rd primary cast in Summit likely won't count under state law, Lundgren said. What's more, no one in Summit could vote for Green or Harbridge in the 74th.
The Associated Press has not called a winner in the 74th District race while it determines if the outcome of the race could be challenged because of the voters who were disenfranchised. As of 11:15 p.m. on Wednesday, Green led by nearly 1,000 votes.
In the news release, Lundgren said about 700 residents of Summit are registered voters.
Lundgren, who oversees elections in Douglas County, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview that she reviewed the new legislative boundaries many times but somehow missed that Summit is now in the 74th District.
''It was human error,'' she said. ''It was a mistake. I made that mistake. ... It was an oversight in one municipality.''