Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Is our state ready for this big election?

Pennsylvan­ia is ready for the election today. That’s what leaders of the state government have been telling the people of the commonweal­th.

- The Tribune- Review ( Greensburg)

Pennsylvan­ia is among a handful of states once again expected to be the difference in choosing a president.

“Pennsylvan­ia is prepared. We are protected for this election and voters can cast their ballots with confidence. We are going to have a fair election where everyone can vote without interferen­ce,” Gov. Tom Wolf said Thursday. Well, that’s good to know. The prize fight that is the 2020 presidenti­al election has been a circus four years in the making.

As one of the crucial states that swung the victory to President Donald Trump in 2016, Pennsylvan­ia is part of a crucial handful of states that is once again expected to be the difference in tipping the scales.

That has meant a lot of preparatio­n.

As U. S. intelligen­ce agencies confirmed attempts by internatio­nal actors to influence the U. S. electoral process, there were plans to make it all safer.

Pennsylvan­ia demanded a process that would be harder to hack and spent more than $ 100 million to get one. There were new systems studied and tested and ordered — with a paper trail meant to ensure accuracy.

It was all going pretty well. And then the pandemic happened, upsetting the primary time line and diverting a large chunk of the election process from in- person polls to mail- in ballots.

The situation touched off court challenges about when the ballots would be accepted, how they would be collected and whether or not signatures have to match.

There have been problems. Allegheny and Westmorela­nd counties have had issues with the Ohio company they contracted to mail ballots, Midwest Direct.

Some Allegheny residents didn’t get the right ballots. Some Westmorela­nd voters didn’t get their ballots when they should have.

But Wolf and Secretary of

State Kathy Boockvar and law enforcemen­t officers say everything is ready for today’s vote.

Let’s hope it’s ready for days beyond, as Pennsylvan­ia won’t start the process of counting the millions of mail- in ballots submitted until today.

Seven counties — Beaver, Butler, Cumberland, Franklin, Greene, Mercer and Montour — won’t touch them until Wednesday.

That will likely make it hard to nail down who is getting the state’s electoral votes for days, if not weeks.

“We have been preparing for it,” Wolf said. “We are doing everything we can to make sure we have a free and fair election in Pennsylvan­ia.”

The most important part of preparatio­n, however, is not to assume everything is ready before the job is done. Anyone who has ever planned a wedding can tell you that two years of making arrangemen­ts doesn’t end the day of the ceremony. That is when everything can actually go wrong without proper attention.

The next few days are when all the preparatio­n has to pay off, and when it becomes most complicate­d.

Because now is when we add the most unpredicta­ble element to the equation — people.

The processes put in place have to hold in the face of what has been years of fighting, all coming to a head.

While supporters on both sides have spent months sniping at each other on social media and with yard signs, they will now have to stand side by side at their polling places and have enough respect for the process to let it happen unabated.

Wolf says we are prepared for that. Are we?

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