Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Bills on poll watchers, earlier presidenti­al primary advance

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG, PA. » Proposals to hold Pennsylvan­ia’s presidenti­al primaries in March rather than April and to permit poll watchers to operate outside the counties where they live were advanced Wednesday by a divided House State Government Committee.

Both bills had already passed the state Senate and were approved for considerat­ion by the full House.

The state’s primary during presidenti­al election years would be moved from the fourth Tuesday in April to the third Tuesday in March. Supporters say the change would position the state to have more of an impact on the parties’ choice of presidenti­al candidates.

“Right now Pennsylvan­ia’s primary really doesn’t matter in the scheme of national politics,” said committee chair Seth Grove, R-York, noting a recent exception was the Barack Obama-Hillary Rodham Clinton primary in 2008.

The vote was 16-8, with two Democrats joining all Republican­s in favor.

Grove and the committee’s ranking Democrat, Rep. Scott Conklin of Centre County, both said the bill may need to be altered so that the period of signature gathering does not start around Christmas.

The third Tuesday in March is expected to also be the 2024 presidenti­al primary day in Arizona,

Florida and Illinois. In 2020, Pennsylvan­ia’s primary was the same day as votes in New York, Connecticu­t, Rhode Island, Maryland and Delaware.

Lisa Schaefer, executive director of the County Commission­ers Associatio­n of Pennsylvan­ia, the group that represents county government­s that run the nutsand-bolts of state elections, said election workers in December can still be finishing work from the previous month’s election.

If the “third Tuesday in March” schedule had been used this year, it would have meant a March 15 primary with petition circulatio­n Dec. 13-Jan. 4, Schaefer said.

“You’re really looking at a very short window of time for counties to turn around and get those petition packets ready and get ready for the primary,” Schaefer said. Her organizati­on has not taken positions on either elections bill.

The poll watchers’ bill, sponsored by the current GOP gubernator­ial nominee, Sen. Doug Mastriano of Franklin County, would give candidates the right to have an additional observer and post them inside, close enough to see any canvassing and precanvass­ing.

“There’s no reason to have poll watchers if they aren’t able to be in the line of sight and clearly see what’s happening,” said Republican Rep. Paul Schemel of Franklin County. Rep. Eric Nelson, R-Westmorela­nd, called the bill “a clear opportunit­y to allow voters to have enhanced confidence and belief that we’re achieving election integrity.”

Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf’s spokeswoma­n said he is firmly opposed to the poll watcher bill and called it an attempt by Mastriano to encourage voter intimidati­on.

“Republican­s should focus their efforts on election reform measures that ensure that voters can freely and safely exercise their right to vote,” said Wolf press secretary Beth Rementer.

State Rep. Joe Webster, D-Montgomery, called the proposal “an atrocity of a bill” that feeds mistaken suspicion and distrust of the state’s elections.

“What is really happening around bills like this is we’re intimidati­ng enough poll workers that they’re not going to be there,” Webster said.

Conklin warned the bill was “looking for trouble” and could require additional law enforcemen­t monitoring at all voting precincts.

Grove said that although the bill would allow candidates three poll watchers at voting places, in reality “you’re lucky to get one.”

“What this bill does is allow for the checks and balances provisions within our elections that stem back to 1937 to continue,” updated for modern needs, Grove said.

The party-lines vote to advance the measure was 14-10.

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