The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Democrats in Pennsylvan­ia scramble to limit number of ‘naked ballots’

Ad campaign shows how to correctly fill out and return votes

- By Nicholas Riccardi and Marc 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 fourstep 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.

The Democratic Party said it and the Joe Biden campaign will also engage in additional outreach, including videos of various political leaders correctly filling out a mail ballot, to combat the problem.

Philadelph­ia’s top elections official, a Democrat, this week warned of “electoral chaos” in Pennsylvan­ia if the state’s Republican-controlled Legislatur­e does not clarify state law to allow counties to count mail-in ballots returned without secrecy envelopes.

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