The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Lawmakers vote to postpone Pa. primary

- By Marc Levy and Mark Scolforo

Pennsylvan­ia lawmakers voted Wednesday to delay the state’s primary election by five weeks to June 2, potentiall­y past the spike of the state’s spreading coronaviru­s cases.

The measure passed both chambers of the Republican­controlled state Legislatur­e on Wednesday and Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat, said he will sign it.

As a result, Pennsylvan­ia will join more than 10 states in delay

ing primaries.

It comes a few months after Wolf and lawmakers approved legislatio­n giving every voter the ability to mail in a ballot.

Under the bill, Pennsylvan­ia will hold its primary election June 2, instead of April 28, when the state could be in the thick of a surge of COVID-19 cases.

Wolf’s administra­tion has steadfastl­y refused to publicly discuss projection­s for when it believes the surge of cases will peak, however. But training and recruiting poll workers during that time could prove impossible, lawmakers say.

Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-Centre, said the Wolf administra­tion has given him no sign of whether it believes the surge of coronaviru­s cases could ease by June 2, enough for people to vote in-person.

“That’s the million-dollar question, or billion or maybe trillion now with the numbers we’re talking about in Washington, DC,” Corman told reporters.

The Democratic Party’s presidenti­al delegate selection rules prevent primaries later than June 16, putting Pennsylvan­ia up against a deadline.

If it becomes clear that it will be impossible to hold an election June 2 because of the virus, lawmakers and the governor will look at options when that time comes,

Corman said.

Rep. Kevin Boyle, D-Philadelph­ia, had pushed for the legislatio­n to include money to pay for counties to send mail-in ballot applicatio­ns to every registered voter, but he said that Republican­s blocked it.

“Hopefully we can move to address that in the weeks to come,” Boyle said.

In addition to delaying the primary date, the legislatio­n gives county election offices a head start on processing and tabulating mail-in ballots, newly allowed under a five-monthold election law.

Letting election workers start at 7 a.m. on election days, instead of after polls close, is designed to help them avoid a massive backup that county officials have warned could extend vote counting in the presidenti­al race for days afterward.

It also requires that challenges to those ballots be filed by the Friday before election days to lighten the post-election load of processing and counting mailin and absentee ballots.

Separately, the legislatio­n lets counties consolidat­e polling places, in part because some are currently located within nursing homes that could be susceptibl­e to outbreaks of the coronaviru­s. Many poll workers are older people who are particular­ly at risk, lawmakers say.

Primary voters will pick candidates in contested races for president, Congress and the Legislatur­e.

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