Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Voting reform package emerges in Pa. Capitol

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG >> Legislatio­n unveiled Monday would overhaul some aspects of how voters cast ballots in Pennsylvan­ia while delivering much of the money counties need to buy voting machines ahead of next year’s presidenti­al election.

The measure that emerged after several months of closed-door negotiatio­ns between Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf and leaders of the Legislatur­e’s Republican majorities would let any voter mail in a ballot, eliminate the ballot option for straight partyticke­t voting and move voter-registrati­on deadlines closer to elections.

It is part of a deal to approve $90 million in aid for voting machines that Wolf wanted counties to buy, a move he had framed as bolstering Pennsylvan­ia’s election security against hackers.

The ranking Democrat on the Senate committee that handles election-related bills, Sen. Anthony Williams, D-Philadelph­ia, said he supports it in the hopes it would increase voter participat­ion.

A spokesman for House Majority Leader Bryan Cutler, R-Lancaster, would not say whether he supported the measure, but he said the legislator supports getting the money to the counties and updating Pennsylvan­ia’s election laws “to be as fair and secure as possible.”

Wolf’s office would only say they were reviewing the wording, and many rankand-file lawmakers, including Democrats, had not read the measure.

Talks on the package started after Wolf vetoed a bill in July that carried the $90 million and the eliminatio­n of the straight partyticke­t voting option. Top Republican­s hadn’t negotiated the bill with him before sending it to his desk, and it lacked his election-reform priorities, he had said.

Wolf then vowed to borrow the money for voting machines the counties, using his existing authority, but was met with a threat of litigation by House Republican­s and has not gone through with that plan.

The new bill doesn’t deliver all of Wolf’s electionre­form priorities: He had also wanted same-day registrati­on and early voting.

The negotiated measure still requires approval from both chambers and was scheduled for a House committee vote on Tuesday.

Under its provisions, voters would no longer have the single-choice option on a ballot to simply select a political party’s candidate for each office. Republican­s began pressing earlier this year to eliminate the straight-party voting option, amid worries that suburban Republican lawmakers will suffer from a voter backlash against President Donald Trump next year.

Wolf and other Democrats had protested the move, saying it could lead to longer waiting lines at polls, and that it was designed to benefit down-ballot Republican candidates. Republican­s countered that most states don’t allow it, although voters in one state, Michigan, restored it by ballot referendum last year after the state’s Republican-controlled government eliminated it.

For people who want to register to vote, the deadline would move from 30 days before an election to 15 days.

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 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? An Investigat­or with the Office of the City Commission­ers, demonstrat­es the ExpressVot­e XL voting machine at the Reading Terminal Market in Philadelph­ia. Legislatio­n heading toward a vote in Pennsylvan­ia would overhaul some aspects of how voters cast ballots while delivering much of the money counties need to buy voting machines ahead of next year’s presidenti­al election.
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE An Investigat­or with the Office of the City Commission­ers, demonstrat­es the ExpressVot­e XL voting machine at the Reading Terminal Market in Philadelph­ia. Legislatio­n heading toward a vote in Pennsylvan­ia would overhaul some aspects of how voters cast ballots while delivering much of the money counties need to buy voting machines ahead of next year’s presidenti­al election.

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