Judge rules that Pennsylvania counties can’t reject undated and wrongly dated mail ballots
Monday’s decision is the latest in a long-running legal dispute over what is a small percentage of votes cast in the state.
Monday’s decision is the latest in a long-running legal dispute over what is a small percentage of votes cast in the state.
In a letter to the homeland security secretary, Pennsylvania’s top election official cited the critical help local election officials have gotten from the cybersecurity agency. This article was originally published by Votebeat, a nonprofit news organization...
County elections officials in Pennsylvania rejected more than 11,000 mail-in ballots for technical reasons in the November election, including thousands that were determined to violate the much litigated requirement that voters provide accurate, handwritten dates on the return envelopes.
A complaint filed Tuesday in Scranton federal court claims the "at-large" system "results in Hispanic citizens not having an equal opportunity to participate in the political process and to elect candidates of their choice."
The Commonwealth Court said the Department of State does not have to reimburse counties when they decertify machines, a defeat for Fulton County in a dispute that arose after two Republican county commissioners permitted Wake Technology Services Inc. to examine and obtain data from Dominion voting machines in 2021.
Relentless is actively recruiting 35,000 low-turnout voters in key swing states, including Pennsylvania. The goal is to pay each of these “mobilizers” up to $400 to talk to at least 60 people in their real lives so that they can ultimately reach 2.1 million voters across the participating states.
In this op-ed, Colin Coyle criticizes Dave McCormick's op-ed for prioritizing foreign interests over American workers, contrasting it with Senator Bob Casey's successful job-supporting initiatives like the CHIPS Act.
In this op-ed, two Rabbis in Dauphin County urge the adoption of a "notice and cure" policy for mail-in ballots to ensure fairness, inclusivity, and the accurate counting of every vote, emphasizing this as a moral and democratic imperative.
In this op-ed, two Rabbis in Dauphin County urge the adoption of a "notice and cure" policy for mail-in ballots to ensure fairness, inclusivity, and the accurate counting of every vote, emphasizing this as a moral and democratic imperative.
A state court decided Thursday that voters in Pennsylvania can cast provisional ballots in place of mail-in ballots that are rejected for a garden-variety mistake they made when they returned it.