The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Fight over Philadelph­ia’s voting machines may head to court

- By Marc Levy The Associated Press

HARRISBURG, PA. >> Former Green Party presidenti­al candidate Jill Stein wants Pennsylvan­ia to block Philadelph­ia from using new touchscree­n machines the state is buying ahead of the 2020 election and threatened court action Wednesday if it doesn’t do so promptly.

Stein’s demand means that she and a group of plaintiffs could take the state back to Philadelph­ia’s federal court, where they filed an agreement last year to settle their lawsuit over vote-counting in 2016’s election.

Stein and the other plaintiffs made the request in writing to Pennsylvan­ia’s Department of State, which oversees elections.

“We must protect our vote and we must protect the authentici­ty of our vote,” Stein told supporters during her announceme­nt in front of Philadelph­ia’s federal courthouse Wednesday.

The department has 30 days under the agreement to respond, and on Wednesday did not say whether it would decertify the machines or consider decertifyi­ng them.

The lawsuit had accused Pennsylvan­ia of violating the constituti­onal rights of voters, saying its voting machines in 2016 were susceptibl­e to hacking and barriers to a recount were pervasive.

Gov. Tom Wolf’s administra­tion settled the lawsuit in part by affirming a commitment it had made previously to push Pennsylvan­ia’s counties to buy new voting systems that leave a verifiable paper trail by 2020.

But Stein said that Pennsylvan­ia’s certificat­ion last year of the ExpressVot­e XL touchscree­n system made by Omaha, Nebraska-based Election Systems & Software violates that agreement, in part because the machine does not meet the agreement’s requiremen­ts for a voter-verifiable paper ballot.

Election-integrity advocates view the machines as less secure than systems that tabulate voter-marked paper ballots. In addition to Philadelph­ia, at least two other counties Cumberland and Northampto­n counties have agreed to purchase or lease the machines.

With warnings of Russian efforts to interfere in 2016’s elections, Pennsylvan­ia was under particular scrutiny because the vast majority of its more than 20,000 electronic voting machines used that year stored votes electronic­ally without printed ballots or other paper-based backups that could be double-checked.

Wolf’s top elections official warned lawmakers earlier this year that failing to replace its voting machines by 2020’s elections could leave Pennsylvan­ia as the only state without voter-verifiable paper systems, and certainly the only swing state in that position.

 ?? MATT ROURKE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former Green Party presidenti­al candidate Jill Steins speaks at a board of elections meeting at City Hall, in Philadelph­ia, Wednesday. Stein wants Pennsylvan­ia to block Philadelph­ia from using new touchscree­n machines it’s buying ahead of 2020’s elections and is threatenin­g court action if it doesn’t do so promptly.
MATT ROURKE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former Green Party presidenti­al candidate Jill Steins speaks at a board of elections meeting at City Hall, in Philadelph­ia, Wednesday. Stein wants Pennsylvan­ia to block Philadelph­ia from using new touchscree­n machines it’s buying ahead of 2020’s elections and is threatenin­g court action if it doesn’t do so promptly.
 ?? MATT ROURKE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Show is an ExpressVot­e XL voting machines displayed at City Hall, in Philadelph­ia,
MATT ROURKE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Show is an ExpressVot­e XL voting machines displayed at City Hall, in Philadelph­ia,

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