The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Vote counting drags into 3rd day

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » Counting an avalanche of 1.4 million mail-in votes dragged into a third day in Pennsylvan­ia on Thursday as some races from Tuesday’s primary remained too close to call.

The Associated Press has not yet called a number of races where the contest was close or had a large number of votes yet to be counted, or both.

Those races included several where incumbent state lawmakers trailed in the count and the only competitiv­e primary among the statewide races, a six-way Democratic primary contest for auditor general.

It also included a closely watched Democratic primary contest between Eugene DePasquale, the outgoing state auditor general, and lawyer Tom Brier for the nomination to challenge four-term Republican U.S. Rep. Scott Perry in the Harrisburg-based 10th District.

More than 1.8 million voters applied for a mail-in or absentee ballot, smashing expectatio­ns by state officials for the debut of the state’s new vote-by-mail law and drawing warnings that many contest results would be delayed. Voters returned almost 1.4 million of them, or 75.5%, according to informatio­n from the state’s elections office Thursday.

Thus far, the AP has called four races in which incumbents lost, all of them in Democratic primaries for a state legislativ­e seat.

Lawmakers had voted to postpone the primary from April 28 to avoid the height of Pennsylvan­ia’s spike in coronaviru­s cases, and candidates and political parties had urged voters to cast ballots by mail to protect themselves from getting infected.

The lack of drama in the outcome of the presidenti­al contests and the massive mail-in vote produced light in-person turnout throughout the state.

Turnout passed 1.7 million, hitting 20% of Pennsylvan­ia’s 8.6 million registered voters.

Meanwhile, deadlines to accept mailed ballots were extended into next week in Philadelph­ia and six counties that are home to a total of 3.8 million voters.

A judge in Delaware County rejected a challenge by the county’s Republican­s to an order by Gov. Tom Wolf allowing the counting of mail-in ballots through next Tuesday as along as they were postmarked before the election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States