The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Trump campaign sues Philly over mail-in voting offices

- ByMarc Levy

HARRISBURG » President Donald Trump’s campaign followed through on a threat to sue Philadelph­ia, filing papers in court Thursday night over city officials preventing campaign representa­tives fromwatchi­ng people registerin­g to vote or filling out mail-in ballots in election offices there.

The lawsuit comes amid Trump claiming that he can only lose the crucial battlegrou­nd state of Pennsylvan­ia if Democrats cheat and, as he did in 2016’s campaign, suggesting that the Democratic bastion of Philadelph­ia needs to be watched closely for election fraud.

The 14-page lawsuit, filed in a state court in Philadelph­ia, revolves around the question of what rights there are for campaign representa­tives towatch people in election officeswhe­re they can register to vote, apply formailin ballots, fill them out or turn them in.

“Bad things are happening in Philadelph­ia,” the campaign’s lawsuit said. “While transparen­cy and accountabi­lity are hallmarks of election integrity, the actions of Philadelph­ia election officials to date have undermined election integrity by shrouding the casting of ballots in secrecy.”

The campaign is asking to be able to assign representa­tives to observe inside satellite election offices that Philadelph­ia began opening Tuesday around the city to help collectwha­t is expected to be an avalanche of mail-in ballots in the Nov. 3 presidenti­al election.

But election lawyers, city officials and the state’s top elections official all say that there is no right under Pennsylvan­ia law, even for a certified poll watcher, to watch people do things like register to vote or fill out a mail-in ballot.

Those rights, they say, are limited to certified campaign representa­tives to observe voting at a polling place on Election Day or the opening of absentee and mail-in ballots in an election office.

A spokespers­on for the city’s election board chairwoman said Thursday night that he had not reviewed the lawsuit, but the board generally does not comment on litigation. The Trump campaign originally threatened to sue Tuesday night.

Some recent Pennsylvan­ia polls show Trump and Biden in a competitiv­e race, while others have Biden slightly ahead.

Philadelph­ia on Tuesday opened the first seven of what is expected to be 17 satellite election offices. The offices are a new creation, deemed to be legal under state law last month by the state Supreme Court in a lawsuit brought by the state Democratic Party.

Trump campaign employees promptly showed up, insisting they be allowed to go in and observe the activity inside. However, city election officials — including a Republican member of a three-member city election board — prevented them, although they offered the campaign a tour of the facilities to let themsee how they operate.

Trump referred to that confrontat­ion in Tuesday night’s debate with Democratic presidenti­al nominee, Joe Biden, saying “bad things happen in Philadelph­ia.”

The fight could widen. A number of counties, including the state’s most heavily populated counties, are opening satellite election offices and putting out drop boxes for voters to drop off mail-in ballots.

Philadelph­ia is home to one in five registered Democratic voters in Pennsylvan­ia, and its turnout is closely watched in presidenti­al elections.

In 2016, Trump won Pennsylvan­ia by about 44,000 votes, or less than 1 percentage point. But he lost Philadelph­ia to Democrat Hillary Clinton by 67 percentage points, or about 475,000 votes, a gap that was slightly smaller than the historic margins produced for Barack Obama.

It is at least the second lawsuit filed in Pennsylvan­ia by the Trump campaign, in an effort to expand poll watching rights and limit how counties can collect mail-in ballots and which mail-in ballots can be counted.

 ?? LAURENCE KESTERSON - THE AP ?? An employee of the Philadelph­ia Commission­ers Office asks a voter a series of Covid-19health questions at a satellite election office before he is allowed to enter to deposit his ballot at Overbrook High School on Thursday, Oct. 1, in Philadelph­ia.
LAURENCE KESTERSON - THE AP An employee of the Philadelph­ia Commission­ers Office asks a voter a series of Covid-19health questions at a satellite election office before he is allowed to enter to deposit his ballot at Overbrook High School on Thursday, Oct. 1, in Philadelph­ia.

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