The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Secrecy envelopes will cause electoral chaos, official warns

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. » Philadelph­ia’s top elections official is warning of electoral chaos in the presidenti­al battlegrou­nd state if lawmakers there do not remove a provision in Pennsylvan­ia law that, under a daysold court decision, requires counties to throw out mailin ballots returned without secrecy envelopes.

Lisa Deeley, chairwoman of the three-member board overseeing Philadelph­ia’s elections, wrote Monday to the state Legislatur­e’s presiding Republican­s amid a partisan stalemate over fixing glitches in Pennsylvan­ia’s fledging mail-in voting law.

In the letter, Deeley urged them to back legislatio­n to remove a provision she calls unnecessar­y and a threat to invalidate more ballots than the margin that decided the state’s 2016 presidenti­al election.

“When you consider that the 2016 Presidenti­al Election in Pennsylvan­ia was decided by just over 44,000 votes, you can see why I am concerned,” Deeley wrote.

Some 30,000 to 40,000 mail-in ballots could arrive without secrecy envelopes in Philadelph­ia alone in November’s presidenti­al election, Deeley estimated, and the state Supreme Court’s interpreta­tion of current law forces election officials to throw out the so-called “naked ballots.”

Most of the attention revolved around the court’s extension of the deadline for counties to receive mailin ballots, but “it is the naked ballot ruling that is going to cause electoral chaos,” she wrote.

Statewide, that could mean throwing out more than 100,000 mail-in ballots in the Nov. 3 presidenti­al election, according to some estimates.

Deeley’s letter comes four days after the state Supreme Court rejected the request by the Democratic Party to clarify the law to allow elections officials to count mailin ballots that arrive without a secrecy envelope.

The ruling was part of a wider decision on contested elements of the state’s election law, and Republican­s on Monday said they will appeal one element of the court’s decision — extending the deadline to receive ballots by three days — to the U.S. Supreme Court.

They also signaled that they are comfortabl­e with the current law on secrecy envelopes.

“We believe this issue is settled for this election,” a spokesman for House Speaker Bryan Cutler, RLancaster, said in a statement. The administra­tion of Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat, supported the Democratic Party’s effort in court. But Republican­s, including President Donald Trump’s campaign, the state Republican Party and Republican legislativ­e leaders, have argued in court that the law requires mail-in ballots without secrecy envelopes to be invalidate­d.

One Republican argument was that the secrecy envelope ensures compliance with constituti­onal guarantees of secrecy in voting.

But Deeley said mailin ballots are no longer counted at polling places where onlookers might see a voter’s choices on ballot that lacks a secrecy enve

lope. Rather, mail-in ballots are now processed centrally, by machines, where secrecy envelopes only slow down counting.

“The secrecy envelope exists now only as a means to disenfranc­hise well intentione­d Pennsylvan­ia voters,” Deeley wrote.

Fueled by concerns over the pandemic, more than 3 million voters in Pennsylvan­ia are expected to cast ballots by mail in the Nov. 3 election. That’s more than 10 times as many as voted by mail in the 2016 presidenti­al election, when Trump beat Democrat Hillary Clinton by slightly more than 44,000 votes, or less than 1 percentage point. Polls show another close race between Democrat Joe Biden and Trump in Pennsylvan­ia. Ensuring that mailin votes are counted is of particular concern to Democrats, since their voters are requesting mail-in ballots by a approximat­ely a three-to-one margin over Republican­s, according to state figures. Philadelph­ia, the state’s largest city, is home to one in five registered Democratic voters. Pennsylvan­ia is one of 16 states that require secrecy envelopes be provided to voters, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. Before the court ruled, Wolf’s top elections officials had messaged counties in May to tell them that there is nothing in the law that requires them or authorizes them to discard a ballot that is returned without a secrecy envelope. That guidance was rescinded following the election. A secrecy envelope is essentiall­y an unmarked envelope that holds the ballot inside the return envelope and theoretica­lly shields election officials and people authorized to watch vote counting from knowing a voter’s choices. Follow Marc Levy on Twitter at www.twitter.com/timelywrit­er. AP’s Advance Voting guide brings you the facts about voting early, by mail or absentee from each state: https://interactiv­es.ap.org/advance-voting-2020

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States