The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Lawsuit targets mail-in ballots

In this May 27 file photo, a worker processes mailin ballots at the Bucks County Board of Elections office prior to the primary election in Doylestown.

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG » President Donald Trump’s re-election campaign, the national Republican Party and four western Pennsylvan­ia members of Congress have sued to force changes to how the state collects and counts mail-in ballots under revamped rules.

The federal lawsuit filed in Pittsburgh claims that as voters jumped to make use of the greatly broadened eligibilit­y for mail-in ballots during the June 2 primary, practices and procedures by elections officials ran afoul of state law and the state and federal constituti­ons.

It claims the defendants, which are the 67 county election boards and Pennsylvan­ia Secretary of State Kathy

Boockvar, “have inexplicab­ly chosen a path that jeopardize­s election security and will lead — and has already led — to the disenfranc­hisement of voters, questions about the accuracy of election results, and ultimately chaos” ahead of the Nov. 3 general election.

A spokeswoma­n for Boockvar, a Democrat appointed by Gov. Tom Wolf, declined comment about the litigation, as did the head of the County Commission­ers Associatio­n of Pennsylvan­ia, whose members administer elections.

The head of the Pennsylvan­ia

Democratic Party called the lawsuit an effort to suppress votes as a campaign tactic, noting Democrats far outpaced Republican­s in getting their voters to apply for mail-in ballots ahead of the primary.

“Statewide vote-by-mail was a bipartisan proposal passed by Republican majorities in Harrisburg,” said Sinceré Harris, the state Democrats’ executive director.

A Pennsylvan­ia law passed last year expanded mail-in ballot options to let anyone who wanted to vote by mail do so even if they did not have a reason they could not vote in person. Expanded mail-in balloting was part of a deal in which Democrats agreed to end straight-party ticket voting. As the global pandemic prompted the state to delay its April primary, more

than 1.8 million voters applied for a mail-in or absentee ballot. They returned nearly 1.5 million of them, according to the state’s elections office.

The lawsuit argues the new procedures were accompanie­d by some changes that were not legal, including in about 20 counties where the plaintiffs say voters could drop off completed ballots at collection sites without sending them or handing them directly to county elections offices.

The plaintiffs want an order to prevent counting ballots that lack secrecy envelopes or that have certain marks on them. They also want poll watchers to be able to monitor

vote counting outside the counties where they live -and to be able to observe counting of all mail-in ballots.

The lawsuit claims there was a “hazardous, hurried and illegal” roll-out of mail-in voting during the primary, saying the system now gives “fraudsters an easy opportunit­y to engage in ballot harvesting, manipulate or destroy ballots, manufactur­e duplicitou­s votes, and sow chaos.”

Along with the Trump campaign, the Republican National Committee and two voters, the other plaintiffs are Republican U.S. Reps. Glenn Thompson, John Joyce, Mike Kelly and Guy Reschentha­ler.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MATT SLOCUM, FILE ??
AP PHOTO/MATT SLOCUM, FILE
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AP PHOTO/MATT SLOCUM, FILE

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