The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Political theater hurts Pennsylvan­ians

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Politician­s continue to prove they are willing to waste our time and resources instead of solving real problems.

In the latest attack on Pennsylvan­ians, the Republican-led state legislatur­e came for our cocktails. Last week, the Pennsylvan­ia Liquor Control Board notified restaurant owners that their licenses for serving liquor outdoors and the ability to sell cocktails-togo would soon end.

This ruling came as a result of lawmakers in Harrisburg voting to end Governor Wolf’s emergency declaratio­n.

While restaurant owners and the average resident may have been caught off guard by the rolled back licenses, this is just the latest from Harrisburg Republican­s who advocated for an end to the emergency declaratio­n and labeled Tom Wolf a tyrant as they lobbied for the state to reopen after pandemic shutdowns. Despite months of advocating for the end of the emergency declaratio­n, Republican­s didn’t seem to have a plan for what happened once it was rescinded.

Not being able to pick up a cocktail-to-go is an inconvenie­nce to consumers, and real economic harm to restaurant owners struggling to come back financiall­y from the pandemic — but it’s just one instance of how political theater in Harrisburg harms Pennsylvan­ians.

A more frightenin­g example is the proposed new election law that would increase costs for local election officials and impose unnecessar­y restrictio­ns on voters. The bill would add problemati­c guidelines to drop boxes, one of the most popular ways to turn in mail-in ballots, in effect rendering them infective in the city. It would also require signature verificati­on for each ballot.

Beyond wasting time and resources, these requiremen­ts also increase the odds that a vote will either not be received in time to count, or will be considered invalid by election officials. The bill even brought back voter ID, a concept struck down by a Commonweal­th Court judge in 2014 court for representi­ng an undue burden to voters.

The stated motive for these restrictio­ns is election security. But while unscrupulo­us politician­s and dishonest TV hosts have ginned up voter fraud concern, they have failed to demonstrat­e any evidence of widespread fraud.

The bill’s supporters cite the addition of several constructi­ve amendments, like boosting pay for election board workers or finally allowing for pre-canvassing of ballots. While these amendments are helpful, the proposed law holds them hostage to unnecessar­y election security measures, the party’s clear priority.

This has become a pattern with Harrisburg Republican­s. Instead of trying to solve real problems in Pennsylvan­ia, they have consistent­ly chosen to fight fake ones.

From “tyrant Tom” to “widespread voter fraud,” these obsessions are features of their imaginatio­n, not significan­t issues facing the commonweal­th. Any laws born out of these non-issues are compromise­d from the start — and Pennsylvan­ians are left to deal with the fallout.

If Republican­s want to restore trust in the system, they should start by apologizin­g for their role in promoting election disinforma­tion, including an effort to award Pennsylvan­ia’s electoral college votes to Donald Trump despite his clear loss.

Instead, they are pushing a bill that will make administer­ing elections more expensive and more difficult, all to solve a problem they have repeatedly failed to prove exists.

Instead of questing for imaginary voter fraud, Harrisburg Republican­s should prioritize the real needs of the election system, and focus their efforts away from this partisan Voting Rights Protection Act.

And while they’re at it, they should leave cocktails-to-go alone, too.

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