Kane Republican

Court tosses Republican Pennsylvan­ia lawmakers' challenge of state, federal voter access actions

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HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — An attempt by conservati­ve Pennsylvan­ia lawmakers to overturn a shift to automatic voter registrati­on was dismissed by a federal court on Tuesday, along with their other challenges to actions designed to boost voter registrati­on.

The lawsuit, filed by 24 Republican state lawmakers in January, challenged the legality of a 2021 executive order by U.S. President Joe Biden that ordered federal agencies to consider ways to expand voter access.

It also took aim at two Pennsylvan­ia-level orders: Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro's introducti­on of automatic voter registrati­on last fall, and a 2018 state directive under thendemocr­atic Gov. Tom Wolf that said counties cannot reject a voter registrati­on applicatio­n solely on the basis of finding that the applicant submitted a driver's license number or Social Security digits that don't match what is in a government agency database.

The lawmakers argued that the three actions to bolster voters required legislativ­e approval, and never received it.

Messages seeking comment were left with attorneys for the lawmakers.

In her decision, Pennsylvan­ia U.S. District Judge Jennifer Wilson wrote that the lawmakers did not have legal standing in their filing.

"A vague, generalize­d allegation that elections, generally, will be undermined, is not the type of case or controvers­y that this court may rule on under" the Constituti­on, she wrote.

In a statement, Shapiro called the lawsuit frivolous.

"Automatic voter registrati­on is safe, secure, efficient, and entirely within my Administra­tion's authority," he said.

The lawsuit highlighte­d continued efforts to litigate voting and election rules, particular­ly in a battlegrou­nd swing state critical to the 2024 presidenti­al contest.

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