Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

ACLU sues to let mis-dated ballots count

- By Marc Levy, Steve Peoples and Aamer Madhani

HARRISBURG, Pa. — Several Pennsylvan­ia groups represente­d by the American Civil Liberties Union have filed suit in federal court seeking to have votes from mail-in or absentee ballots counted even if they lack proper dates on their return envelopes.

The suit filed Friday night in western Pennsylvan­ia by state chapters of the NAACP, League of Women Voters, and Common Cause and other groups follows a state Supreme Court ruling last week that barred officials from counting ballots that lack accurate, handwritte­n dates on their return envelopes as required by state law.

The groups said refusing to count such ballots “because of a trivial paperwork error” could disenfranc­hise thousands of voters and would violate provisions of the U.S. Civil Rights Act of 1964, which states that immaterial errors or omissions should not be used to prevent voting.

“Refusing to count votes based on immaterial paperwork errors has a suppressiv­e effect … by erecting yet another roadblock preventing them from voting and having their votes counted,” the lawsuit said.

The groups — which also included Philadelph­ians Organized to Witness, Empower and Rebuild, the Black Political Empowermen­t Project and Make the Road Pennsylvan­ia — also said they would have to divert resources from voter mobilizati­on and education to track down voters who omitted the date on the return envelopes of their ballots.

They are asking the court to bar election officials from rejecting otherwise valid ballots with missing or incorrect dates on the return envelope and to bar state and county government­s from certifying any election in which such ballots are not counted.

The state Supreme Court had unanimousl­y barred officials from counting such votes, directing county boards of elections to “segregate and preserve” those ballots, but the justices split 3-3 on whether making the envelope dates mandatory under state law would violate provisions of federal civil rights law.

The high court issued a supplement­al order Saturday clarifying that the incorrectl­y dated ballot envelopes referred to in addition to undated ballots meant mail-in ballot envelopes with dates outside the range of Sept. 19 through Nov. 8 and absentee ballot envelopes dated outside the range of Aug. 30 through Nov. 8.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States