KEY POINTS
  • The judge sided with three voters represented by a conservative law firm who argued the state elections commission should have immediately deactivated any of the roughly 234,000 voters who didn't respond to an October mailing within 30 days.
  • The voters were flagged as having potentially moved.
  • Ozaukee County Judge Paul Malloy denied a request by elections commission attorneys to put his decision on hold.
A voter arrives to vote in a special election for North Carolina's 9th Congressional District at a polling station in Charlotte, North Carolina, September 10, 2019.

A Wisconsin judge on Friday ordered that the registration of up to 234,000 voters be tossed out because they may have moved, a victory for conservatives that could make it more difficult for people to vote next year in the key swing state.

The judge sided with three voters represented by a conservative law firm who argued the state elections commission should have immediately deactivated any of the roughly 234,000 voters who didn't respond to an October mailing within 30 days. The voters were flagged as having potentially moved.