GOP lawsuit aims to force Pennsylvania to reject undated ballots

GOP lawsuit aims to force Pennsylvania to reject undated ballots

The Republican National Committee (RNC), National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) and Pennsylvania GOP have filed a last-minute lawsuit that argues the state is illegally dodging state law and a Supreme Court ruling by saying it will count undated absentee ballots, just weeks before a hotly contested between Dr. Mehmet Oz and John Fetterman in the upcoming general election on November 8.

According to the GOP groups, Leigh Chapman, the Democrat Acting Secretary of State for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, defied a U.S. Supreme Court decision and the Republican-majority Pennsylvania General Assembly by directing county boards of elections to count undated mail-in ballots.

The GOP complaint was filed to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court on October 16, just three weeks shy of the general election, saying, “the time for the Court to act is now.”

“As the Pennsylvania legislature and U.S. Supreme Court have made clear, undated mail-in ballots should not be counted.

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Republicans are holding Pennsylvania Democrats accountable for their brazen defiance of the Supreme Court and the rules duly set by the legislature,” RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel, NRCC Chairman Tom Emmer, and PAGOP Chairman Lawrence Tabas said in a joint statement.

A voter arrives to cast a mail-in ballot at the City-County Building in downtown Pittsburgh May 16, 2022.
(AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

“Pennsylvania Democrats have a history of election integrity failures and Pennsylvanians deserve better: this lawsuit is the latest step in Republican efforts to promote free, fair, and transparent elections in the Keystone State,” they said.

The lawsuit follows a U.S. Supreme Court order on October 11 that vacated a Third Circuit decision that ordered the counting of ballots submitted in undated envelopes in Pennsylvania.

In a statement reacting to the Supreme Court’s decision, Chapman maintained that, “Every county is expected to include undated ballots in their official returns for the Nov. 8 election.” She said the decision provides “no justification for counties to exclude ballots based on a minor omission, and we expect that counties will continue to comply with their obligation to count all legal votes.”

Ronna McDaniel, chairwoman of the Republican National Committee
(Bridget Bennett/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The GOP groups argue that the General Assembly already “has mandated that a voter who uses an absentee or mail-in ballot ‘shall… fill out, date and sign the declaration’ printed on the outer envelope of the ballot.”

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They also cite a previous majority decision by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court that held “any absentee or mail-in ballot that does not comply with the General Assembly’s date requirement is invalid and cannot be counted in any election after the 2020 general election.”

The lawsuit asks the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to order state officials not to count undated absentee ballots.

A voter casts a ballot at a polling location in Pittsburgh May 17, 2022.
(Nate Smallwood/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

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The Commonwealth is no stranger to election ballot drama. Pennsylvania was one of the states former President Trump accused of sloppy implementation of its laws – Trump argued that GOP poll watchers didn’t have “meaningful access” to the process of counting votes, and that some votes were altered to help then-candidate Joe Biden.

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Should the state Supreme Court reject the GOP request, the case could make its way to the U.S. Supreme Court.