Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Senate GOP hires company to review Pa.’s 2020 election

Trump supporters spur data scrutiny

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG — Republican­s in the Pennsylvan­ia Senate said Friday they will pay up to $270,000 over the next six months to have an Iowa consulting firm examine the 2020 election with an eye toward developing changes to state election law.

The “forensic investigat­ion” is being launched in response to pressure from Republican supporters of former President Donald Trump upset over his 80,000-vote loss in the state, but is well short of the Arizona-style “audit” that many of them have clamored for.

A related subpoena issued by a GOP-controlled Senate committee, seeking voter data from the executive branch, is currently on hold awaiting a hearing in Commonweal­th Court next month.

The contract was signed by Majority Leader Kim Ward, R-Westmorela­nd, and Envoy Sage, a Dubuque, Iowa-based company. Senate Republican spokespers­on Jason Thompson said it will be made public in redacted form in the coming days.

The company will be paid out of a taxpayerfu­nded leadership account that Ms. Ward controls and the agreement can be extended, he said.

“The goal is to determine what flaws exist in our election system and to fix them through legislatio­n,” Mr. Thompson said Friday.

Envoy Sage president Steve Lahr issued a statement saying company officials have no “pre-conceived notions for what we will or will not find” and that he considers objectivit­y to be critical.

Mr. Thompson initially said Mr. Lahr, who did not reply to a message seeking an interview, recalled making only a single political donation, several years ago, to a friend from his time in the military. Later Friday, Mr. Thompson said Mr. Lahr acknowledg­ed also making donations to the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee and to U.S. Sen. Lindsay Graham, a South Carolina Republican.

“I think that it was an honest mistake on his part,” Mr. Thompson said.

Mr. Lahr’s statement described the process ahead as including document analysis, review of concerns solicited from the public by the Senate and a look at election integrity initiative­s in other states.

Senate Intergover­nmental Operations Committee Chair Cris Dush, RJefferson, who is leading the review process, said in a statement that Envoy Sage had handled sensitive documents for other government­al entities.

Democrats in the Senate and on the committee Mr. Dush chairs had no role in selecting the consultant, said Senate Minority Leader Jay Costa, D-Allegheny. Mr. Costa noted his Republican colleagues had previously said they would wait until the subpoena litigation had been resolved.

“They agreed to wait, and then went ahead with hiring their own firm to carry out this political, unnecessar­y and costly witch hunt,” Mr. Costa said in a release. He also noted Senate President Pro Tempore Jake Corman, R-Centre, recently announced his entry into the 2022 gubernator­ial primary.

Mr. Thompson said the firm was hired now in part because, in opposing the subpoena, Democrats had said they did not know who would be given the voter data.

Senate Democrats and state Attorney General Josh Shapiro, a Democrat who also is in the race for governor, have sought to block the subpoena, calling it an abuse of legislativ­e power and focusing on the demand for informatio­n about voters.

“They intend to entrust the personal, private data of 9 million Pennsylvan­ian voters to a company that has been in existence for barely one year and that has no election experience, other than donating to the Republican Party,” Mr. Shapiro’s office said in a statement. “We still have no informatio­n on how they intend to protect voters’ confidenti­al informatio­n and what they plan to use it for.”

The subpoena seeks state elections officials’ communicat­ions with counties and the names of who voted in last year’s presidenti­al election, including birth dates, addresses, driver’s license numbers and partial Social Security numbers.

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