The Punxsutawney Spirit

Pennsylvan­ia sues 3 counties over counting mail-in ballots

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Pennsylvan­ia’s elections agency sued three Republican­controlled county government­s on Tuesday, seeking to force their election boards to report primary results that include ballots with undated exterior envelopes — the subject of several other lawsuits.

The Department of State sued Lancaster, Berks and Fayette counties in Commonweal­th Court, describing them as “outlier counties” that have not properly certified vote tallies from the May 17 election that included nominating contests for U.S. Senate, governor and most of the Legislatur­e.

The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled May 20 that mail-in ballots without a required date on the return envelope must be allowed in a 2021 county judge race in Pennsylvan­ia. Although the U.S. Supreme Court declined to halt the Senate vote-counting after the primary, three justices signed onto an opinion that said the 3rd Circuit was “very likely wrong.”

A Commonweal­th Court judge, in a separate case that was directly about reporting this year’s Senate primary election results, ruled on June 2 that county boards of election should count mail-in votes that lack the security envelopes’ hand-written dates, and report vote totals both with and without those ballots.

In the new case, the Department of State and acting Secretary of State Leigh Chapman under Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf want an order forcing the three counties to include in their primary election tallies, within three days, all absentee and mail-in voters, “even if the voter failed to write a date on the declaratio­n printed on the ballot’s return envelope.”

They said in a filing that a ballot envelope’s handwritte­n date “is not necessary for any purpose, does not remedy any mischief and does not advance any other objective,” and that “allowing just three county boards to exclude votes that all other county boards have included in their returns creates impermissi­ble discrepanc­ies in the administra­tion of Pennsylvan­ia’s 2022 primary election.”

“Interpreti­ng Pennsylvan­ia law to allow a county board of election to exclude a ballot from its final certified results because of a minor and meaningles­s irregulari­ty, such as a voter omitting a date from the declaratio­n on a timely received ballot, would fail to fulfill the purpose of the Pennsylvan­ia Election Code and would risk a conflict with both the Pennsylvan­ia Constituti­on and federal law,” wrote the state agency’s lawyers from the attorney general’s office.

The lawsuit stated that Berks County’s election board said on June 23 it would not count mail-in votes without the date. A Berks County spokespers­on declined comment.

Fayette, the department said in the complaint, notified the state of its decision on June 26 and officials there ignored subsequent attempts to discuss the issue. Lancaster told the state of its decision on June 27 and reiterated it July 5. Messages seeking comment were left with Fayette and Lancaster county government officials on Tuesday.

Department of State press secretary Grace Griffaton said the agency had no further comment because the litigation is pending.

A 2019 law under which legislativ­e Republican­s eliminated straight-party voting also gave Democrats a broad expansion of mail-in voting in a state where their use had previously been severely restricted. Since the pandemic, Pennsylvan­ia Democrats have voted by mail in far greater numbers than their Republican counterpar­ts.

Pennsylvan­ia voters are instructed to write a date — not necessaril­y the date when they signed their ballot — next to their signature on the outside of mail-in return envelopes. The handwritte­n dates on ballot envelopes do not determine whether voters are eligible or if they cast their ballots on time.

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