The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Pa. voters can apply online for absentee ballots

- By Mark Scolforo The Associated Press

HARRISBURG, PA. >> Pennsylvan­ians who will not be able to vote in person this fall can apply online for absentee ballots for the first time, officials announced Monday.

The Wolf administra­tion said voters can begin next week to use the new process to obtain absentee ballots for the Nov. 5 election.

Voters will still have to mail or hand-deliver completed ballots to elections offices by 5 p.m. Friday, Nov. 1.

Applicants will need a PennDOT driver license or ID number, although that is expected to change next year. The program will also be expanded in 2020 to military and oversees voters.

The online option will add convenienc­e to an existing system that requires applicants to fill out paper forms and deliver them by hand or mail to county elections offices.

Critics of the existing system have argued that changes to Pennsylvan­ia’s comparativ­ely strict absentee voting rules would make voting easier and more widespread.

The administra­tion says more than 1.4 million voter registrati­on applicatio­ns have been made or registrati­ons changed since August 2015, when the state began to offer online voter registrati­on.

Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf said the changes will make the absentee ballot applicatio­n process faster and more accessible for thousands of voters.

House Republican spokesman Mike Straub said GOP state representa­tives support “lawful absentee ballot access.”

“While the current effort by Gov. Wolf falls within the scope of existing law, any further changes would necessitat­e legislatio­n,” Straub said.

Wolf’s office said he has authority to make the absentee applicatio­n change because the Election Code allows the secretary of state to create the applicatio­n form for absentee ballots, and another state law permits electronic signatures to be used wherever a written record is required.

Senate Republican spokeswoma­n Jennifer Kocher called the new procedure a step toward improved access to absentee ballots.

“We still believe meaningful legislativ­e changes such as the ones vetoed by the governor earlier this year still need to be made in order to significan­tly improve the commonweal­th’s voting practices,” Kocher said.

In July, Wolf vetoed legislatio­n that would have loosened absentee voting deadlines and helped counties purchase new voting machines because, in part , it also would have ended the straight-party ticket option. Wolf supports letting people vote by absentee ballot even if they don’t have an excuse about why they can’t vote in person.

Absentee ballot applicatio­ns will be accepted starting Monday, Sept. 16. The deadline to apply this year is 5 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 29.

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