The Morning Call

Court: Count contested ballots in Senate primary

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG — A state court agreed Thursday night in a ballot-counting lawsuit with the campaign of David McCormick, who was in a neck-and-neck Republican primary contest for the U.S. Senate against celebrity heart surgeon Dr. Mehmet Oz until McCormick conceded the race Friday night.

In the decision, Commonweal­th Court Judge Renee Cohn Jubelirer ordered counties to count the ballots in question, although her decision could be reversed, depending on what the U.S. Supreme Court does in the coming days on a separate case.

Because of the high court’s involvemen­t, Jubelirer ordered counties to keep the undated ballots separate from other ballots and to count them separately.

The ballots in question were roughly 880 mail-in ballots that lack a handwritte­n date on the envelope.

Jubelirer’s decision comes as the race between McCormick, a former hedge fund CEO, and Oz is in the midst of a statewide recount.

Roughly 900 votes had separated McCormick and Oz in the May 17 primary, out of more than 1.3 million ballots cast.

Oz’s campaign, the Republican National Committee and the state Republican Party have opposed McCormick in court.

State law requires a voter to write a date next to their signature on the outside of their mail-in ballot return envelopes.

A handwritte­n date on a ballot envelope plays no role in determinin­g whether a voter is eligible or whether a ballot is cast on time.

McCormick sued in state court to force counties to count the ballots, after the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled two weeks ago in a case from a local judicial last year that throwing out an undated ballot violates a voter’s civil rights.

In an emergency appeal, the U.S. Supreme Court temporaril­y blocked the counting of the ballots.

The Supreme Court’s action — called an administra­tive stay — had frozen the matter until the court can give the case further considerat­ion. There was no timeline on the high court’s undertakin­g, and as of Friday night’s press time, the court had not amended its decision based on McCormick’s concession.

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