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Nazareth, Pa., United States

Thursday, March 05, 2020

Will Pa. Counties Have a Complete Count Election Night?

Under recent changes to the Election Code, voters now have until one week before the election (April 21) in which to apply for an absentee or mail-in ballot. Then they have until 8 pm on Election Day (April 28) to return them. Elections officials are unable to open and scan these ballots until 8 pm. Though scanning should be easy, it will be an ordeal to open two envelopes and then unfold the ballot for the scanner. Voter Registrar Amy Cozze told me yesterday that her office has already received close to 2,000 applications. Statewide, there are 20,000, according to The Courier Times. There will be more. Lots more. And this is just the primary. In the 2012 Presidential, Northampton County elections officials processed 6,008 absentee ballots in the general election. In 2016, there were 6,610. This year, no one really knows how many will choose to vote by mail. Estimates are that there will be at least 15,000 no-excuse absentee ballots this year, with the number growing each year. But can they all be counted on Election Day?

According to The Pittsburgh Post Gazette, this is a question elections officials themselves are asking. It argues that officials should be able to start the count sooner.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

How do you get the mail-in ballot?

Anonymous said...

No reason not to start first thing in the AM, so that most are counted by close of polls, why start after the polls close.

Bernie O'Hare said...

You can apply online. https://www.pavoterservices.pa.gov/OnlineAbsenteeApplication/#/OnlineAbsenteeBegin

Bernie O'Hare said...

"No reason not to start first thing in the AM, so that most are counted by close of polls, why start after the polls close."

Because the law forbids opening the ballots until then.

I agree that elections officials should be able to get a head start, but all counting should be done publicly so that candidates, party reps and members of the public can witness how things are going. If someone is behind, he or she would have time to appeal to supporters who may not have yet voted. This would in turn increase turnout and make elections more democratic. (small d).

Elections workers are awful busy on election day, sop a change in the law providing for an early count would make things less hectic for them, too.

Anonymous said...

It will be hectec and the excuses and rationale for the problems is being slowly fed to the public

Anonymous said...

Thank you for the site. I want to ensure that I get to vote McClueless out.

Anonymous said...

Anyone on council asking about how many lawsuits are in the pipeline coming up?

Anonymous said...

Have no fear over the voting machines, the iPads. Just fear devious people who manage them. It’s coming.