Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pa. Senate launches election inquiry

‘Forensic’ review to study ballots, records

- By Andrew Seidman

Almost 10 months after the presidenti­al election, the Pennsylvan­ia Senate will open hearings this week as it launches a “forensic investigat­ion,” the top Republican senator said Monday.

Senate President Pro Tempore Jake Corman, R-Centre, said lawmakers will seek voting records, ballots and machines — and he suggested the Senate will use subpoenas to get them.

“We can bring people in. We can put them under oath. We can subpoena records, and that’s what we need to do,” he said in an interview with proTrump media personalit­y Wendy Bell. “That’s what we’re going to do.”

Mr. Corman said he has spoken with former President Donald Trump about the issue: “I think he’s comfortabl­e [with] where we’re heading.”

The developmen­t came days after Mr. Corman ousted fellow GOP Sen. Doug Mastriano, RFranklin, as the leader in Harrisburg of the push for an Arizonasty­le partisan “audit” of the 2020 election, saying Mr. Mastriano was more interested in “grandstand­ing” than in getting results. Mr. Corman installed Sen. Cris Dush, R-Jefferson, as the new chairman of the committee that will lead the review.

Mr. Corman, who was first elected to the Senate in 1998, has long been seen as a steady hand and protector of the legislativ­e institutio­n. In a matter of days,

he has gone from mostly keeping quiet about Trump supporters’ demands for a “forensic investigat­ion” into President Joe Biden’s victory to plunging full steam ahead into the baseless election fraud claims parroted by the former president and his fans.

Mr. Corman is up for reelection next year, and perceived disloyalty to Mr. Trump could invite a primary challenge. Late last year, Mr. Corman announced he was forming a Special Committee on Election Integrity and Reform; it held hearings this year and recommende­d changes to state law. Two other committees in the Legislatur­e also reviewed Pennsylvan­ia’s election system this year.

It’s not clear how the Senate’s new review would actually work, including: how it would be funded; how and where sensitive election equipment and materials would be securely stored; who would conduct it and what training they would have; what standards and processes would be followed; what documentat­ion would be required; and what the end product would be.

Each Pennsylvan­ia county already conducted an audit of the election results before they were certified last year, as required by law. All but three of the 67 also participat­ed in a “risklimiti­ng” audit, a gold-standard method of confirming the reported results against a random sample of ballots.

The renewed push for an investigat­ion comes as officials in Arizona brace for the release of a report detailing the findings of a monthslong partisan inquiry into the election in that state.

The Arizona “forensic investigat­ion” was led by a contractor with no previous experience auditing elections, funded by Trump allies who promoted the false notion that the election was stolen, and widely denounced by profession­al election administra­tors and security experts for failing to follow best practices. It also became a hub for the QAnon conspiracy theory, which centers around the idea that prominent Democrats and other elites run a child sextraffic­king ring and worship Satan.

With the Arizona review wrapping up, Pennsylvan­ia may become ground zero for the election denial movement. Mr. Corman said he hopes the Arizona findings “will be a springboar­d for us” and “make it harder for courts to shoot us down.”

“We are committed to going wherever this takes us,” he said. “There’s no ceiling on this.”

Mr. Corman said Monday a review was necessary in the state because many constituen­ts don’t trust Pennsylvan­ia’s elections. He also reiterated criticism of thenSecret­ary of State Kathy Boockvar’s guidance to county elections officials.

“I don’t necessaril­y have faith in the results,” Mr. Corman said in the interview. “I think there were many problems in our election that we need to get to the bottom of.”

He said he’s “heard stories” about fraud such as dead people voting, which he cited as supporting the need for a review of the election.

“We need to get the voter rolls, we need to get the ballots — things of that nature — so we can match them up to see: who voted, where were they living, were they alive?”

He said the Senate is joining a lawsuit filed by Fulton County against the Wolf administra­tion, challengin­g the secretary of state’s decision to decertify its voting machines. The administra­tion took that step after the county allowed a third-party vendor to access the machines earlier this year as part of an “audit.”

“We are joining that suit so we can fight this out first, to make sure we can get access to those machines,” Mr. Corman said.

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