The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Mail-in ballots spur fight over deadline

- By Marc Levy

Some officials are warning that a flood of mail-in ballots will create problems in Tuesday’s primary election.

Some county and state officials are warning that a flood of mailed-in ballots in Pennsylvan­ia — fueled by fears of in-person voting during the coronaviru­s pandemic — will create problems in Tuesday’s primary election that must be fixed before they cause a disaster in this battlegrou­nd state in November’s presidenti­al election.

For one, they are warning that there will be no way to produce timely election results in November unless the law changes to allow counties to process mailedin ballots before Election Day. Even in Tuesday’s relatively low-turnout primary election, election night results might be unlikely in closely contested races, they say.

“No one wants to be in the situation where the U.S. presidenti­al race is coming down to Pennsylvan­ia and there is a week or two delay on us in delivering a victor,” said state Rep. Kevin Boyle, D-Philadelph­ia.

Boyle plans to sponsor legislatio­n to give counties more time to process the ballots, starting the Saturday before the election.

Boyle, with support from county election directors, pushed for a similar change in March when lawmakers voted to delay the primary election by five weeks to June 2. However, it lacked support from Republican­s who control the House and Senate majorities.

Of more immediate concern is the question of whether voters can mail their ballots back to county election offices in time to be counted in Tuesday’s primary election. The deadline in state law is 8 p.m. on election night. But some ballots are still in the mail to voters, and it could take five days to a week for the post office to deliver the returned ballots to county election officials.

Montgomery County asked the state Commonweal­th

Court for an emergency order Wednesday granting seven additional days for ballots postmarked no later than Election Day to arrive and be counted. So far, other efforts to that effect in lower courts have failed.

In the meantime, some counties are working to provide alternativ­es — such as posting drop boxes in strategic locations — to voters who have not mailed in their ballots yet.

More than 1.8 million voters have requested a mail-in or absentee ballot, according to state officials. The deadline to apply for a mail-in or absentee ballot was two days ago, but a final figure of applicatio­n was still being assembled.

Gov. Tom Wolf’s top elections official, Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar, said her estimate for the number of applicatio­ns had been “blown out of the water” and that she at least hoped to work with lawmakers to change the law before the November election.

More than 3.2 million people cast ballots in the 2016 primary election when the presidenti­al nomination­s were still contested. This year, the nomination­s are unconteste­d, lowering expectatio­ns for turnout.

Lisa Schaefer, executive director of the County Commission­ers Associatio­n of Pennsylvan­ia, said county election directors had been unified in urging state lawmakers to let them process mailed-in ballots before election day, even before the pandemic hit.

“We need to adjust our expectatio­ns that it’s going

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Processing work on mail in ballots for the Pennsylvan­ia Primary election is done by Tim Vernick at the Butler County Bureau of Elections on Thursday in Butler, Pa.
KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Processing work on mail in ballots for the Pennsylvan­ia Primary election is done by Tim Vernick at the Butler County Bureau of Elections on Thursday in Butler, Pa.

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