The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Democrats in Pa. scramble to limit the number of ‘naked ballots’

- By Nicholas Riccardi andMarc Levy

HARRISBURG » Democrats are launching a digital ad targeting Pennsylvan­ians voting by mail to explain how to correctly fill out and return the ballots, hoping to avert worried prediction­s that 100,000 votes or more could be invalidate­d because the ballots aren’t put in the proper envelope.

The so-called naked ballots have become a huge concern for Democrats in the state since the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court ruled last week that ballots had to be rejected if not enclosed in the proper secrecy envelope. The ruling was a victory for President Donald Trump’s campaign in the battlegrou­nd state.

Democrats so far have been far more likely than Republican­s to request mail-in ballots in Pennsylvan­ia and the rest of the country. Trump won Pennsylvan­ia by a mere 44,000 votes in 2016, and polls show a close race between Trump and Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden.

A 30-second digital ad released Thursday walks voters through the process of correctly filling out and returning a Pennsylvan­ia absentee ballot. The June primary was the first election with widespread mail voting in the state and most voters have little experience with the method.

“Remember, you must place the ballot in the secrecy envelope first for your vote to count,” the ad’s male narrator says. After walking voters

through a four-step process, he closes by saying: “That’s all there is.”

The ad is aimed at voters who have already requested a mail-in ballot.

“With vote-by-mail requests surging, it’s important that every voter using a mail ballot for the first time has all the informatio­n they need so that their ballot will be counted, including the importance of sealing their ballot in the secrecy envelope,” Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez said in a statement.

Counties are just starting to send outmail-in and absentee ballots to voters.

On Thursday, Pennsylvan­ia’s second-most populous county, Allegheny County, which is home to Pittsburgh, said it has begun to send out ballot packets, delivering approximat­ely 70,000 ballots over the last 24 hours to the post office for mailing.

Former Kentucky Secretary of State Trey Grayson said naked ballots are just one of the ways people can “mess up” their absentee or mail-in ballot.

“They’re especial ly

tough in environmen­ts where you abruptly shift to vote by mail,” Grayson said. “The campaigns can play a great role here. There are some voter education things they can do.”

He said the voters who are most likely tomake the error are infrequent voters who may be hard to reach. “They’re probably not reading the Philadelph­ia Inquirer or the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, but maybe they see the digital ad in their Facebook feed,” Grayson said.

Andrew McCutchen, the Philadelph­ia Phillies star outfielder, was on a Zoom call Thursday filming a nonpartisa­n public service announceme­nt about how to correctly fill out a mailin ballot, with an emphasis on secrecy envelopes.

In it, McCutchen is surrounded by cardboard cutouts of people to mimic the cardboard cutouts of fans in baseball stands this year. He says: “Then comesmy favorite part, the secrecy envelope. That’s the envelope you put your ballot in. ... Then you put that secrecy envelope inside the big envelope.”

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR, FILE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This May 26file photo shows an Official Democratic General Primary mail-in ballot and secrecy envelope, for the Pennsylvan­ia primary in Pittsburgh. Democrats are launching a digital ad targeting Pennsylvan­ians voting by mail to explain how to correctly fill out and return the ballots, hoping to avert worried prediction­s that 100,000 votes or more could be invalidate­d because the ballots aren’t put in the proper envelope.
GENE J. PUSKAR, FILE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This May 26file photo shows an Official Democratic General Primary mail-in ballot and secrecy envelope, for the Pennsylvan­ia primary in Pittsburgh. Democrats are launching a digital ad targeting Pennsylvan­ians voting by mail to explain how to correctly fill out and return the ballots, hoping to avert worried prediction­s that 100,000 votes or more could be invalidate­d because the ballots aren’t put in the proper envelope.

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