The Morning Call

Counties will again be unable to process mail ballots early

Delayed results possible during Pa.’s primary election

- By Marie Albiges

HARRISBURG — Local officials in Pennsylvan­ia are facing another election without extra time to process mail ballots, likely leading to delayed results and putting increased pressure on counties reeling from the most expensive contest ever.

House Majority Leader Kerry Benninghof­f, R-Centre, and Rep. Seth Grove, R-York, told the New Castle News last week they likely wouldn’t consider any election-related legislatio­n until after the House State Government Committee completes its 14 election oversight meetings, the last of which is scheduled for May 5, less than two weeks before the May 18 primary.

The municipal primary — which includes races for local and appellate court judges, school board members, and township positions — typically has much lower turnout than a presidenti­al race. But election officials said they can’t predict how many voters will take advantage of the state’s no-excuse mail voting law during an off-year election.

“It’s just not possible, even with a small election, to get everything counted in one day plus run another election,” said Marybeth Kuznik, Armstrong County’s election director.

Last year, county election officials repeatedly asked the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e to pass a bill giving them time before Election Day to begin processing, or precanvass­ing, mail ballots. A staggering 2.6 million people voted by mail in November, the first general election under a state law that allowed anyone to cast a ballot in that manner.

GOP leadership in the House last year tied precanvass­ing to banning drop boxes and relaxing restrictio­ns on partisan poll watchers. Gov. Tom Wolf vowed to veto that measure, and the Legislatur­e failed to pass any changes.

As a result, election officials could only begin the process at 7 a.m. Nov. 3, which led to false claims that Democrats were stealing the election from Trump as more mail votes for Joe Biden were counted after Election Day.

Local election officials faced a flood of complaints and blame over the delayed results, and more than 20 have left their positions since the General Assembly enacted no-excuse mail voting.

Months later, they’re still waiting for that extra time.

“I can’t say I’m expecting it,” Kuznik said. “I never expect anything with the Legislatur­e. I’ve learned long ago not to.”

A spokespers­on for Grove said it would be premature to comment on legislatio­n until the election oversight hearings are completed and “all voices are heard.”

Republican leaders in the House and Senate did not respond to questions from Spotlight PA and Votebeat about any election-related changes expected before May.

“I think we always believed that the [General Assembly] session schedule was not going to be conducive to getting any changes done in time for the May primary,” said Lisa Schaefer, executive director of the County Commission­ers Associatio­n of Pennsylvan­ia.

Schaefer is instead eyeing the lawmakers’ schedule in the second half of the year and hoping they consider legislatio­n before they break for the summer in July. She said making any election-related changes after the Legislatur­e returns from its summer recess in September — six to eight weeks before the November election — would create a challenge for the election directors tasked with implementi­ng and familiariz­ing themselves with those changes.

“Making changes in that time frame isn’t good for election directors, isn’t good for voters,” she said.

Schaefer said she isn’t expecting the May primary to be as problemati­c as the November election. County staff have now been through two elections under the vote-by-mail law and should be more familiar with the process. The off-year primary also typically means fewer voters are casting ballots, which helps election directors manage the workload better.

And “there’s not a string of litigation going on that could potentiall­y change the rules here and there,” Schaefer said, referring to state Supreme Court rulings that affected the way mail ballots were processed in the days and weeks leading up to the November election.

“We’re hopeful that it just won’t be as intense as it was in November,” said Indiana County Commission­er Sherene Hess, who chairs the County Commission­ers Associatio­n of Pennsylvan­ia Election Reform Committee.

Those rule changes — which included last-minute guidance from the Department of State on how voters should be notified about mistakes on their mail ballot envelopes and what counties should do with late-arriving ballots — have been on full display at the House State Government Committee election hearings, with Republican­s focusing on the ways counties inconsiste­ntly applied that guidance.

A spokespers­on for Wolf said some GOP members are using the meetings “to manufactur­e bogus claims about voter fraud” so they can make it harder for people to vote.

Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s have filed or plan to file 14 bills that the Brennan Center for Justice said restrict or roll back access to voting, including bills that would repeal the state’s no-excuse mail voting.

“The simple fact is House Republican­s do not need 14 hearings to tell us that Pennsylvan­ians want to make it easier to vote or that counties need precanvass­ing of mail ballots,” Wolf spokespers­on Lyndsay Kensinger said.

This article is made possible through Votebeat, a nonpartisa­n reporting project covering local election integrity and voting access. This article is available for reprint under the terms of Votebeat’s republishi­ng policy.

100% ESSENTIAL: Spotlight PA relies on funding from foundation­s and readers like you who are committed to accountabi­lity journalism that gets results. Become a member today at spotlightp­a.org/donate.

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