Current:Home > InvestPennsylvania county broke law by refusing to tell voters if it rejected their ballot, judge says -Wealth Evolution Experts
Pennsylvania county broke law by refusing to tell voters if it rejected their ballot, judge says
View
Date:2025-04-14 00:55:26
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A Republican-controlled county in Pennsylvania violated state law when election workers refused to tell voters that their mail-in ballot had been rejected and wouldn’t be counted in last April’s primary election, a judge ruled.
As a result, voters in Washington County were unable to exercise their legal right either to challenge the decision of the county elections board or to cast a provisional ballot in place of the rejected mail-in ballot, the judge said.
The decision is one of several election-related lawsuits being fought in Pennsylvania’s courts, a hotly contested presidential battleground where November’s contest between Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Kamala Harris could be razor close.
“It’s a great day for voters in Washington County,” David Gatling Sr., president of the NAACP branch in Washington, Pennsylvania, said in a statement Monday.
The NAACP branch sued the county earlier this summer as did seven voters whose ballots had been rejected in the April 23 primary and the Center for Coalfield Justice, accusing Washington County of violating the constitutional due process rights of voters by deliberately concealing whether their ballot had been counted.
In his decision Friday, Judge Brandon Neuman ordered Washington County to notify any voter whose mail-in ballot is rejected because of an error — such as a missing signature or missing handwritten date — so that the voter has an opportunity to challenge the decision.
Neuman, elected as a Democrat, also ordered the county to allow those voters to vote by provisional ballot to help ensure they could cast a ballot that would be counted.
In the primary, the county rejected 259 mail-in ballots that had been received before polls closed, or 2% of all mail-in ballots received on time, the judge wrote. Roughly three-fourths of mail-in ballots tend to be cast by Democrats in Pennsylvania, possibly the result of Trump baselessly claiming for years that mail-in voting is rife with fraud.
Nick Sherman, the chairman of Washington County’s commissioners, said he and other county officials hadn’t decided whether to appeal. However, Sherman said he believed the county’s practices are compliant with state law.
Sherman noted that Neuman is a Democrat, and called it a prime example of a judge “legislating from the bench.”
“I would question how you would read a law that is that black and white and then make a ruling like that,” Sherman said in an interview.
Sherman said state law does not allow the county to begin processing mail-in ballots — called precanvassing — until Election Day starting at 7 a.m.
However, Witold Walczak, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania, which helped represent the plaintiffs, said county election workers can see right away whether a just-arrived mail-in ballot has mistakes that disqualify it.
Most counties check for such mistakes and notify voters immediately or enter the ballot’s status into the state’s voting database, Walczak said. That helps alert a voter that their ballot was rejected so they can try to make sure they cast a ballot that counts, Walczak said.
None of that is precanvassing, Walczak said.
“Precanvassing is about opening the (ballot) envelopes,” Walczak said. “That’s not what this is. And if Sherman is right, then 80% of counties are doing it wrong.”
___
Follow Marc Levy at https://x.com/timelywriter.
veryGood! (437)
Related
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Peter Navarro is 1st Trump White House official to serve prison time related to Jan. 6 attack
- Men used AR-style rifles to kill protected wild burros in Mojave Desert, federal prosecutors say
- March Madness as we know it could be on the way out amid seismic changes in college sports
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Tennessee nurse practitioner known as ‘Rock Doc’ gets 20 years for illegally prescribing opioids
- Gov. Sanders deploys Arkansas National Guard to support southern border control efforts
- Minnesota court rules pharmacist discriminated against woman in denying emergency contraception
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Trump asks Supreme Court to dismiss case charging him with plotting to overturn 2020 election
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- First flight of Americans from Haiti lands at Miami International Airport to escape chaos
- Toddler hit, killed by Uber driver in Texas after being dropped off at apartment: Police
- Looking for a way to ditch that afternoon coffee? Here are the health benefits of chai tea
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- Washington's cherry trees burst into peak bloom, crowds flock to see famous blossoms
- Russia's Vladimir Putin hails election victory, but critics make presence known despite harsh suppression
- Purdue’s Edey, Tennessee’s Knecht, UNC’s Davis headline the AP men’s college All-America teams
Recommendation
What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
As electric vehicle sales slow, US relaxes plans for stricter auto emissions standards for a while
BP oil refinery in Indiana resumes normal operations weeks after power outage, temporary shutdown
How Sister Wives' Christine Brown Is Honoring Garrison Brown 2 Weeks After His Death
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Tennessee nurse practitioner known as ‘Rock Doc’ gets 20 years for illegally prescribing opioids
Olivia Culpo Reveals Her Non-Negotiable for Christian McCaffrey Wedding
Boeing's woes could mean higher airfares for U.S. travelers