The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Wolf expected to sign election reform measures

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG >> Legislatio­n headed toward the governor’s desk would deliver the biggest changes to Pennsylvan­ia election laws in decades and provide aid to counties for much of the cost of new voting machines as a bulwark against hacking in next year’s presidenti­al election.

In a compromise package negotiated behind closed doors over the last four months, Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf secured some of his priorities to increase voting access, including allowing any voter to mail in a ballot and moving voter-registrati­on deadlines closer to the election.

In exchange, Republican­s who control the state Legislatur­e dropped their opposition to Wolf’s

insistence that counties buy new voting machines and secured their top priority, eliminatin­g the ballot option for straight party-ticket voting.

Counties, meanwhile, will get $90 million in aid to offset the costs of buying the new machines ahead of an election in which Pennsylvan­ia will be one of the nation’s premier presidenti­al battlegrou­nds.

The Senate passed it Tuesday, 35-14, hours after the House passed it, 138-61. Wolf will sign it and help Pennsylvan­ia shed its status as the nation’s least voterfrien­dly state, his office said.

“It’s a giant leap forward that makes voting more convenient for millions of Pennsylvan­ians and improves our election security,” Wolf said in a statement.

All but two “no” votes were cast by Democrats, including some who said the bill doesn’t go far enough to expand voter access and protested the eliminatio­n of straight party-ticket voting as a convenienc­e used particular­ly by lower-income, urban and minority voters.

Democratic lawmakers also said the closed-door negotiatio­ns that produced the bill last week lacked transparen­cy.

“The rush to achieve this measure in an abbreviate­d amount of time is concerning to me and, I think, should be concerning to all,” Sen. Vincent Hughes, D-Philadelph­ia, said during floor debate.

Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-Centre, defended the give-and-take that led to the final bill, and said the final product is a worthy one.

“Ultimately, this is the most significan­t modernizat­ion of our elections code in decades,” Corman said.

Republican­s contend that the straight party-ticket option encourages voters to blindly pick parties instead of candidates.

Democrats in Pennsylvan­ia outnumber Republican­s by a five-to-four margin, and Republican­s pushed to eliminate the option amid worries that down-ballot Republican candidates will suffer from a suburban voter backlash against President Donald Trump next year.

Wolf last year began pressing counties to buy machines with a paper-based backup, following warnings by federal authoritie­s that Russian hackers had targeted Pennsylvan­ia and at least 20 other states during 2016’s election.

Pennsylvan­ia was one of about a dozen states where some or all voters, until recently, used machines that store votes electronic­ally without a paper-based backup that can be audited.

Wolf’s administra­tion had warned lawmakers that Pennsylvan­ia could otherwise be left as the only state — and certainly the only presidenti­al battlegrou­nd state — without paper systems that allow a voter to double-check how their vote was recorded.

The total price tag to replace the state’s roughly 25,000 voting machines could exceed $125 million. Wolf’s administra­tion says four in five counties have either bought or leased machines or have an agreement to do so.

Many states long ago adopted farther-reaching changes to election laws, including automatica­lly registerin­g people to vote when they turn 18, allowing election-day voter registrati­on or opening polling places for early in-person voting.

The changes in the bill are relatively modest in comparison. Still, the bill had backing from goodgovern­ment groups and its advocates say it carries Pennsylvan­ia’s biggest election changes in more than 80 years.

The bill allows any voter to mail in a ballot for any reason, up to 50 days before the election. Currently, Pennsylvan­ia restricts mailin ballots to “absentee” voters who meet a narrow set of reasons.

The bill also allows voters to register up to 15 days before the election. Among states, Pennsylvan­ia’s current 30-day deadline is the furthest out, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

With a lawsuit pending over Pennsylvan­ia’s deadlines for counties to receive absentee ballots, the bill adjusts those deadlines to 8 p.m. on election days. Currently, the deadline is 5 p.m. on the Friday before the election, the nation’s earliest.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this June 13file photo, ExpressVot­e XL voting machines are displayed during a demonstrat­ion at the Reading Terminal Market in Philadelph­ia. Legislatio­n speeding toward approval in Pennsylvan­ia would deliver the biggest changes to state election laws in decades while approving much of the money it’ll cost counties to buy new voting machines ahead of next year’s presidenti­al election.
ASSOCIATED PRESS In this June 13file photo, ExpressVot­e XL voting machines are displayed during a demonstrat­ion at the Reading Terminal Market in Philadelph­ia. Legislatio­n speeding toward approval in Pennsylvan­ia would deliver the biggest changes to state election laws in decades while approving much of the money it’ll cost counties to buy new voting machines ahead of next year’s presidenti­al election.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this May 21 file photo, “I Voted Today” stickers are displayed at a polling place in Philadelph­ia.
ASSOCIATED PRESS In this May 21 file photo, “I Voted Today” stickers are displayed at a polling place in Philadelph­ia.

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