The Morning Call

Court throws out over 2,000 undated ballots

Ruling could determine tight state Senate race in western Pennsylvan­ia

- By Mark Scoforo

HARRISBURG — More than 2,000 undated mail-in ballots cannot be counted in a western Pennsylvan­ia state Senate race, an appeals court ruled Thursday, saying handwritte­n dates “provide a measure of security.”

The 2-1 Commonweal­th Court decision could swing the neck-and-neck contest in which Republican challenger Nicole Ziccarelli trails narrowly against Sen. Jim Brewster, D-Allegheny.

Judge Kevin Brobson, a Republican, said to ignore the requiremen­t that mail-in voters date the outside of return envelopes “would constitute a judicial rewrite of the statute.”

In a dissent, the panel’s lone Democrat, Judge Michael Wojcik said a blank or even simply unsigned declaratio­n on the outer envelope would be disqualify­ing, but the ballots are time-stamped.

“I view the requiremen­t of a voter-inserted date on the declaratio­n as similar to the issue of the color of ink that is used to fill in the ballot,” Wojcik wrote.

The case was sent back to Allegheny County.

The issue, however, is already at the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court, which on Wednesday agreed to hear a case involving Republican President Donald Trump’s campaign seeking to have more than 8,000 ballots disqualifi­ed in Philadelph­ia because voters who signed their ballots failed to also handwrite their names, addresses or the date.

Ziccarelli is down by just 17 votes against Brewster, a former banker first elected to the Senate 10 years ago, in a race Associated Press has not yet called.

With more than 131,000 votes cast in Allegheny and Westmorela­nd counties, a district that runs down the Alle-Kiski Valley, Brewster’s lead is a razor-thin 50.01% to 49.99%.

Ziccarelli also has a lawsuit pending in Westmorela­nd County that argues elections officials in that part of the Senate district treated mail-in ballots without secrecy envelopes inconsiste­ntly and improperly counted some provisiona­l ballots.

In that case, she argues the elections board should not have allowed all votes to count from voters who had to cast provisiona­l ballots and were also directed to sign the poll book. The signatures on a precinct’s poll book make it unclear whether those voters also cast a convention­al voting machine vote.

Brewster, a former mayor of McKeesport, is the ranking Democrat on the Law and Justice and Game and Fisheries committees. Ziccarelli is a lawyer from New Kensington.

The state Senate is days from the end of its current term, with Republican­s holding a 28-21 majority, along with an independen­t who caucuses with the GOP. A Ziccarelli win would give Republican­s a 30-20 working majority in January.

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