The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Local voters can help assure election integrity

- — The Philadelph­ia Inquirer, The Associated Press

The alarming developmen­ts in this election year make clear the fight to exercise the right to vote is far from over.

Americans have fought and died for the right to vote. The alarming developmen­ts in this extraordin­ary election year make clear the fight to exercise that right is far from over, particular­ly for voters of color in cities like Philadelph­ia.

The disruptive “poll watchers” the Trump campaign dispatched to the city’s early voting locations — where poll watchers don’t have the right to enter — and the so-called election integrity panel Harrisburg Republican­s are concocting suggest that partisan attempts to intimidate voters and interfere in the election process are more brazen than at any time in living memory. President Donald Trump, who is trailing Democratic nominee Joe Biden in most polls, including those in Pennsylvan­ia, is laying the groundwork to de-legitimize ballot counts nationwide — and has hinted he might not readily concede to losing, either.

Months before preliminar­y voting began in September, Trump was seeding doubts and sowing fears about the Nov. 3 election. He pro claimed without evidence in May that the only way he could possibly lose his bid for a second termwould be if the voting were “rigged,” made fake claims about the capabiliti­es of the United States Postal Service, and falsely asserted that voting by mail is vulnerable to wholesale fraud — which it is not.

Trump unleashed a barrage of disinforma­tion during last week’s debate. He predicted with almost incantator­y fervor that the casting and counting of ballots “will be a disaster” and that declaring a winner may take “months” or even “years.” But as Joe Biden rightly pointed out on the Cleveland debate stage, the president can’t “stop you from being able to determine the outcome” of the election.

Biden’s timely note of reassuranc­e bears repeating: There are more reasons for the electorate to be confident than there are reasons to panic.

Trump’s self-serving prediction­s of “disaster” and “fraud” impugn the integrity of the public servants and civic-minded volunteers who are the backbone of our locally controlled process of voting. The system is not without flaws. But the traditiona­l Americanwa­y of casting ballots — including by mail, beginning in the 19th century— has served our country well, as have the Democrats and Republican­swho work tomake sure every vote is counted.

There is also reason to be confident in the fact that the $2 trillion CARES Act on March 27 included $400 million to states nationwide to help them conduct elections in the face of the pandemic. Pennsylvan­ia received $14.2 million and New Jersey, $10.2 million.

These resources could help reduce the potential for significan­t errors, delays, and even the exceedingl­y rare attempts to game the voting system. Local election boards in Pennsylvan­ia and New Jersey need to add staff, secure additional technology, and train additional volunteers to handle the challenges of accommodat­ing in-person, andmail-in, balloting. We have confidence that the technical glitches that confounded early voters at election stations in Philly neighborho­ods last week will be corrected. And the discovery that several memory sticks for programmin­g voting machines were stolen from a warehouse in East Falls must be vigorously investigat­ed.

Like the memory-stick theft, questionab­le mail-in ballots often are identified and investigat­ed. The improper disposal of sevenmail-in ballots for Trump in Republican-controlled Luzerne County — an incident Trump seized upon during the debate — came to the attention of election officials.

Due to the pandemic, confusionw­ould likely have arisen this year even without the president’s falsehoods. It’s also worth noting that worries surroundin­g elections have long been mostly about low voter turnout and lack of civic engagement. The turmoil of this election has served to motivate voters, with a record turnout predicted.

Pennsylvan­ia voters who wish to use a mail-in ballot must request one from their county election office before the Oct. 27 deadline. Informatio­n is available through those offices or online at VotePa.gov/ state/elections.

It’s incumbent on voters to educate themselves, and for those choosing to vote bymail to do sowell in advance ofNov. 3. And it’s the responsibi­lity of local election boards and poll workers tomake sure that voters are well served and ballots are properly counted. Pandemic and politics notwithsta­nding, we are confident this American tradition will be upheld.

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