The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

GOP lawmakers too eager to suppress votes

The year is young, but hyper-partisan Republican­s in Harrisburg already have earned themselves national notoriety twice in 2021.

- —The Philadelph­ia Inquirer

Lawmakers want to require mail-in voters to register before every election rather than create a permanent list.

First, GOP senators refused to seat a Democratic colleague until they were forced to do so by a federal judge. Then the Brennan Center, a bipartisan law and public policy institute, published its Voting Laws Roundup 2021 report finding that Pennsylvan­ia is the launching pad for 14 legislativ­e proposals to restrict or complicate access to voting — the most of any state.

Republican legislator­s in Pennsylvan­ia plan to introduce measures to require voters who want to do so by mail to request a ballot prior to every election, rather than placing such voters on a permanent voteby-mail-list.

Republican­s also want to give poll watchers greater access to observe mail-in ballot tabulation; require signature matches on outer envelopes and the mail-in ballots inside; and exclude all mail-in ballots, regardless of postmark, that are not received by election day.

While 28 states seek to increase restrictio­ns, only in Pennsylvan­ia are GOP legislator­s aiming to revise the history they helped make in October 2019. That’s when a majority in their party joined Democrats and overwhelmi­ngly approved reforms that relaxed registrati­on deadlines and made voting by mail available not only to those who need to be excused from voting in person, but to all voters.

Despite the unusually bipartisan support for “no excuses” mail-in ballots in 2019, President Donald Trump’s loss to Joe Biden in Pennsylvan­ia and elsewhere has inspired a dramatic change of heart among some Republican­s.

Rep. Michael J. Puskaric of Allegheny County filed a House sponsorshi­p memo Dec. 8 saying he would seek to repeal “no excuses” voting by mail. His excuse was a purported flood of calls from constituen­ts concerned about election integrity.

Republican Rep. Jim Gregory of Blair County made the same excuse about a surge of constituen­t calls. He also echoed Puskaric’s objections to the state Supreme Court decision extending the deadline for counting mail-in ballots.

Many constituen­ts calling their legislator­s may have been alarmed by the widespread but baseless “election fraud” claims spread by Trump and his allies before, during, and since Nov. 3. Such claims were tossed out of dozens of courtrooms nationwide, including in Pennsylvan­ia — where a record-breaking 6.9 million voters exercised their right to be heard in person, or by mail.

Along with judicial decisions that found no basis for claims of widespread election fraud, the turnout suggests that voting systems worked well, despite the pandemic.

Further reforms will enable more Pennsylvan­ians to participat­e in the process. The Brennan Center noted that some legislator­s in the state have proposed measures to expand early voting and to allow pre-canvassing, or preparatio­ns for counting, mailin ballots before election day. (A bill introduced by Sen. Wayne Fontana, an Allegheny County Democrat, would provide for seven days of pre-canvassing). Another encouragin­g sign: Election officials are seeking a seat at the table during statehouse discussion­s about voting reforms.

Republican­s in Harrisburg have far more important work to do than currying favor with their party’s Trump faction. After all, the Pennsylvan­ia voters who elected Biden also elected them.

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