Current:Home > reviewsLawsuit says Pennsylvania county deliberately hid decisions to invalidate some mail-in ballots -Thrive Capital Insights
Lawsuit says Pennsylvania county deliberately hid decisions to invalidate some mail-in ballots
View
Date:2025-04-18 03:33:50
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A western Pennsylvania county’s elected commissioners were sued Monday over a policy adopted for this year’s primary in which people whose mail-in ballots were disqualified for technical violations say they were purposely not informed in time to fix errors.
Seven disqualified primary voters, the local NAACP branch and the Center for Coalfield Justice sued Washington County’s election board over what they called “systematic and deliberate efforts” to conceal the policy by directing elections office staff not to tell voters who called that they had made errors that prevented their votes from being counted.
The lawsuit filed in county common pleas court said the policy resulted in 259 voters being disenfranchised and many of those voters still do not realize it. The seven voters who are suing, ages 45 to 85, all had their mail-in ballots invalidated because of incomplete or missing dates, the lawsuit stated. One also failed to sign the exterior envelope and another signed in the wrong place.
“Because of the board’s actions, voters had no way of learning that their ballot would not be counted, and were deprived of the opportunity to protect their right to vote by taking advantage of an existing statutory process: voting by provisional ballot,” the lawsuit claimed.
The lawsuit seeks to have Washington County’s current policy declared unconstitutional as a violation of due process rights and to prevent the elections board from concealing information from voters and misleading them. It was filed by lawyers with the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania, Public Interest Law Center and the Philadelphia-based law firm Dechert.
Washington County had notified voters their ballots were filled out incorrectly and gave those voters a chance to fix them until this year’s April 23 primary. For this year’s primary, the Washington commissioners voted 2-1 to not allow voters to cure improper ballots and had staff mark them in the statewide elections software as “received,” a status that does not tell voters their ballots won’t be counted. The two Republican commissioners were in favor, the Democrat opposed.
The lawsuit says no other county in Pennsylvania “actively conceals the insufficiency of a voter’s mail-in ballot submission, especially when a voter calls their county elections’ office to inquire whether their mail-in ballot meets the requirements and will be counted.”
Messages seeking comment were left Monday for Washington Board of Commissioners Chairman Nick Sherman, a Republican, and for the county’s lawyer, Gary Sweat. An ACLU lawyer said attempts to engage the commissioners on the issue drew no response.
Retired occupational therapist Bruce Jacobs, 65, one of the plaintiffs, said in a video news conference that the primary was long over by the time he learned his vote had been invalidated because he failed to sign and date the return envelope. He said he felt deceived and his rights were denied.
“County officials have eroded people’s rights to the dignity of our elections,” Jacobs said. “And I believe that this must change.”
Pennsylvania made access to mail-in ballots universal, a Democratic priority, under a 2019 law that also eliminated straight-party ticket voting, a Republican goal. The pandemic followed a few months later, fueling participation in mail-in voting. In the subsequent elections, Pennsylvania Democrats have been far more likely than Republicans to vote by mail.
The process has drawn a series of lawsuits, most notably over whether errors in filling out the exterior of the return envelope can invalidate the ballot. Earlier this year, the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a mandate that the envelopes contain accurate, handwritten dates.
During the April primary, redesigned exterior envelopes reduced the rate of rejected ballots, according to state elections officials.
Older voters are disproportionately more likely to send in ballot envelopes with incorrect or missing dates, advocates have said.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Oklahoma parole board recommends governor spare the life of man on death row
- Boy Meets World’s Maitland Ward Shares How Costar Ben Savage Reacted to Her Porn Career
- UNLV quarterback sitting out rest of season due to unfulfilled 'commitments'
- Rapper Fatman Scoop died of heart disease, medical examiner says
- 2024 Olympics: Gymnast Ana Barbosu Taking Social Media Break After Scoring Controversy
- 'Nobody Wants This': Adam Brody, Kristen Bell on love, why perfect match 'can't be found'
- Ex-officer says he went along with ‘cover-up’ of fatal beating hoping Tyre Nichols would survive
- 'America's Got Talent' 2024 winner revealed to be Indiana's 'singing janitor'
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Keith Urban and Jimmy Fallon Reveal Hilarious Prank They Played on Nicole Kidman at the Met Gala
Ranking
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Love Is Blind’s Sarah Ann Bick Reveals She and Jeramey Lutinski Broke Up
- Maryland files lawsuit against cargo ship owners in Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse
- It's Banned Books Week: Most challenged titles and how publishers are pushing back
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Tearful Julie Chrisley Apologizes to Her Family Before 7-Year Prison Sentence Is Upheld
- Marcellus Williams executed in Missouri amid strong innocence claims: 'It is murder'
- Judge blocks one part of new Alabama absentee ballot restrictions
Recommendation
Judge says Mexican ex-official tried to bribe inmates in a bid for new US drug trial
Demi Lovato doesn’t remember much of her time on Disney Channel. It's called dissociation.
Jury awards $2.78 million to nanny over hidden camera in bedroom
1 charged after St. Louis police officer hit and killed responding to crash
From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
Tarek El Moussa Shares Update on Ex Christina Hall Amid Divorce
Inside Tia Mowry and Twin Sister Tamera Mowry's Forever Bond
Can AI make video games more immersive? Some studios turn to AI-fueled NPCs for more interaction