The Morning Call (Sunday)

Throw out all Pa. mail-in ballots, Republican congressma­n’s lawsuit requests

- By Jeremy Roebuck

The Philadelph­ia Inquirer In a last-ditch legal effort to halt certificat­ion of Pennsylvan­ia’s election results next week, one of President Donald Trump’s biggest boosters in the state filed a long-shot lawsuit Saturday seeking to disenfranc­hise at least 2.6 million voters by throwing out every mail ballot cast in the Nov. 3 election.

In his filing before Pennsylvan­ia Commonweal­th Court, Butler County Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly argued that the 2019 law, passed by the state’s GOP-controlled Legislatur­e, which created no-excuse mail voting in the state for the first time was unconstitu­tional and “illegally implemente­d.”

He asks the court to bar the state from certifying any election results that include mail ballots, or alternativ­ely, to throw out all votes cast in the election entirely and appoint the state legislator­s to choose the delegates that will award the 20 electoral votes.

That latter idea has become increasing­ly popular in GOP circles as Trump has refused for nearly three weeks to accept his loss to President-elect Joe Biden. In fact, the president’s campaign has sought a similar remedy, another lawsuit awaiting a ruling from a federal judge in Williamspo­rt.

But a wide array of Republican, Democrat and nonpartisa­n election law experts have agreed that the request has limited basis in law and that it is unlikely any court would adopt such a sweeping interventi­on.

But Kelly’s lawsuit may face even greater hurdles. The specific law he is challengin­g included provisions requiring all constituti­onal challenges to it to be filed with the Pennsyl

vania Supreme Court within six months of the law’s final passage. His suit brought before a lower appellate court comes six months after that deadline.

In it, he argues that the Legislatur­e did not have the authority to expand the availabili­ty of remote voting and that if they wished to do so it would have required an amendment to the state constituti­on.

Both Wolf and the state’s top election administra­tor, Secretary of the Commonweal­th Kathy Boockvar, have said they are prepared to certify the Pennsylvan­ia final vote tallies and cement Biden’s slate of Electoral College electors as soon as counties certify their results. The deadline for that is Monday.

In addition to Kelly, who was reelected this year based in part on 35,000 mail ballots, the plaintiffs also include five GOPvoters from Erie, Mercer and Allegheny counties as well as two losing Republican candidates for office — Sean Parnell, who lost his congressio­nal bid to incumbent U.S. Rep. Connor Lamb, and Philadelph­ian Wanda Logan, who was beaten by Democrat Amen Brown in a state House race.

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA|AP ?? U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly, R-Pa.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA|AP U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly, R-Pa.

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