Pennsylvania
Man Behind Sketchy ‘Audit’ of Pennsylvania’s Voting Machines Has Ties to Failed Arizona Recount
Pennsylvania counties are nonetheless mired in doubtful election “audits” two years after Joe Biden’s presidential win, and new disinformation about 2020 voting machines is circulating forward of the midterms. Now, officers inform The Every day Beast they don’t even know who’s behind the most recent “report” purporting to point out poll fraud.
In September, a brand new “report” started circulating—as first reported by Pennsylvania’s WITF—that claimed 2020 ballots scanned on one among Allegheny County’s voting machines appeared blurry. (Blue voters rallied within the county to provide Biden an edge within the swing state.) It claimed that some 10,000 ballots could have been affected. By the subsequent day, right-wing conspiracy bloggers had seized on the report back to declare, incorrectly, that the evaluate had discovered “10,000 counterfeit ballots.” A number of days later, Patrick Byrne, the MAGA-loving former Overstock CEO, printed a weblog put up that claimed the report discovered “16,000 pretend ballots” in Allegheny County.
By the point the Allegheny Board of Elections met 4 days later, the doc had been forwarded to the county a number of instances, data present, together with by two locals who requested to talk on the assembly.
The rationale for the blurry scans was most likely easy, Allegheny County’s elections supervisor, David Voye, instructed Councilman Sam DeMarco, who requested for a proof of the blurry ballots “earlier than this factor takes off.”
“Over the weekend, I used to be despatched an electronic mail by which somebody talked a couple of evaluate of the photographs of ballots that they did in 2020 and the poor high quality of photos off of 1 specific scanner,” DeMarco instructed Voye. After that message, “it jumped to movies, the place somebody places out a video claiming that the unclear photos signify counterfeit ballots,” DeMarco mentioned.
“We did speak to our machine mechanic,” Voye replied. “He thinks it’s simply an unclean display on the scanner.”
Allegheny County officers revealed to The Every day Beast that they don’t know who commissioned the “report” in query. “It was not approved by the county,” Allegheny County communications director Amie Downs instructed The Every day Beast, including that “we don’t imagine the claims to be correct.”
On the Board of Elections assembly, Voye went on to clarify how ludicrous the implied ballot-fraud plot was. “For me to scan 10,000 counterfeit ballots on election night time, in full view of about 200 county workers and roughly 40 occasion watchers, I don’t see that as possible.” Different county commissioners went on to notice that the scanning space was beneath fixed surveillance, utilizing randomly assigned scanners, making the percentages of the alleged fraud “subsequent to nothing.”
Council members concluded the assembly by asking listeners for proof of actual, actionable election malfeasance.
“Like Wake TSI, Erich Speckin is a veteran of the Maricopa audit. ”
“We hear about these allegations, however what we don’t get is any definitive, particular data that’s actionable,” DeMarco mentioned. A crowd of meeting-goers, who had voiced conspiracy theories in the course of the assembly’s public feedback part, shouted in disapproval.
Footage of the Board of Elections assembly has 1,000 views on Fb. In distinction, a single conspiracy video claiming “10,000 counterfeit ballots” in Allegheny has greater than 30,000 views.
It’s not even clear who commissioned the report. Its creator, Erich Specking, claimed, “I’ve been requested to evaluate scans and poll rely sheets from the November 2020 election in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania.” However an lawyer representing Speckin didn’t reply questions on who requested Speckin to evaluate the scanned ballots. She famous that the scans have been obtained legally, via a Pennsylvania “Proper To Know” request.
(Downs, the Allegheny County spokesperson confirmed that the photographs of the ballots had been legally obtained however that after their launch, “the Division of State issued steering to all Elections workplaces that such photos ought to be thought of to be contents of a poll field and should not out there for launch. Some other subsequent requests have been denied pursuant to that steering.”)
Speckin’s Sept. 16 report on Allegheny County was not his solely latest foray into Pennsylvania voting data. The day prior to this, he’d printed a evaluate of Dominion voting machines in Pennsylvania’s solidly crimson Fulton County, the place he purported to search out safety flaws within the machines. 5 days later, Fulton County and its board of elections filed go well with towards Dominion, citing Spekin’s report.
Speckin’s lawyer didn’t touch upon who commissioned Speckin to evaluate Fulton’s voting machines. Reached through electronic mail, Fulton County elections director Patti Hess declined to reply questions on who commissioned the report (or who was paying for it), referring The Every day Beast to the county’s particular counsel, who didn’t return a request for remark.
Fulton County has a particular counsel on voting machine-related issues as a result of Speckin’s report is no less than the third try by state and native Republicans to evaluate the Republican county’s Dominion machines.
As Donald Trump and allies fumed over his loss in late 2020, a coalition of Pennsylvania state senators and pro-Trump attorneys quietly requested for entry to conservative counties’ voting machines, The Washington Publish reported final 12 months. Solely Fulton County is thought to have agreed.
On Dec. 31, 2020, county officers allowed the corporate Wake TSI to examine its voting machines. Wake TSI would quickly change into acquainted to followers of election fraud conspiracy theories. The corporate contributed to a chaotic election “audit” in Arizona’s Maricopa County final 12 months. In each Maricopa and Fulton Counties, the corporate was employed by Defending the Republic, a nonprofit run by conspiracy-promoting lawyer Sidney Powell. Neither county’s audits have revealed proof of voter fraud; the audits’ most important results have been to burden taxpayers, after state officers dominated that each audits compromised the integrity of the voting machines they have been supposed to examine.
Nonetheless, each counties have remained frequent fixtures of election conspiracy theories.
Republican lawmakers have actively contributed to these baseless theories in Fulton County. In late 2021, Pennsylvania’s Republican-led Senate agreed to pay $270,000 in public funds for one more inspection of Fulton’s voting machines, this time by the corporate Envoy Sage, which has no expertise with elections, WITF reported. That effort has stalled, after a March court docket ruling compelled auditors to abide by strict protocols for dealing with voting machines.
Like Wake TSI, Erich Speckin is a veteran of the Maricopa audit. In an look on a conspiracy podcast in February, Speckin claimed to have contributed to the Arizona effort, and to have discovered points with no less than 36,000 ballots in that “audit.”
The Maricopa County audit in the end upheld Biden’s 2020 victory. But conspiracy theorists nonetheless level to it as proof of Trump’s supposed win.
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Turnpike to switch to
While putting air in his tire near the Pennsylvania Turnpike, Sean Malloy said he uses the highway often.
Malloy said he welcomes the change to open road tolling if it means it makes his commute more convenient.
“No brainer. They should’ve done that a long time ago,” said Malloy.
Tollbooths will soon become a thing of the past on the Pennsylvania Turnpike with the change that begins on Sunday.
Drivers will be charged electronically as they pass under overhead structures called gantries, instead of the traditional stop-and-go tolling. For E-ZPass drivers, the toll money will be taken out of your account, but others will receive a bill in the mail.
The commission advises drivers to make sure they mount their E-ZPass tag in their vehicle and have all their information including their vehicle and credit card updated.
Open road tolling allows drivers to pass through a toll, without the hassle of stopping. This method also reduces incidents on the highway and increases customer convenience.
The change will first start east of Reading and along the Northeast Extension.
“I’ve had E-ZPass for a few years, so I’m kind of used to the drive-thru. I think it’s going to make it a lot simpler for everybody. I think it’s going to avoid a lot of congestion,” said Pennsylvania resident Tony Cuttone.
Another change is how the toll will be calculated. The turnpike will now use the number of axles, height, and miles traveled rather than the vehicle’s weight to determine the rate.
A 5% toll increase will also take effect on Sunday, but the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission said that with open road tolling and other changes, most non-commercial drivers will pay less than they did before, but commercial drivers could see an increase of up to $5.
“We worked really hard behind the scenes to make sure that all of the changes that are coming with open road tolling are all revenue neutral,” said Marissa Orbanek with the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission.
Orbanek said the changes will modernize the system and also make it safer to travel.
“We actually have open road tolling highlighted throughout our system currently at the Delaware River Bridge which is closer to the customers in Philadelphia. And where we already highlighted open road tolling, we’ve seen a decrease in the percentage of crash rates,” she said.
The Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission said it will begin removing the toll booths later this year.
Pennsylvania
Meet new and familiar faces from throughout Pennsylvania region being sworn in to Congress
The new year brings a new Congress to Washington after the contentious 2024 elections.
Republicans will control the U.S. House, Senate and White House when President-elect Donald Trump is sworn in on Jan. 20. But the GOP captured a narrow lead in the Senate, and it holds on to one of the smallest House majorities since the Great Depression [219-215 with the resignation of Rep. Matt Gaetz.]
Our area is seeing some new faces taking the oath of office in Washington, and some are changing titles.
Rep. Ryan Mackenzie (R-PA-7)
A former State Representative since 2012, Ryan Mackenzie was one of two Republicans to flip Democratic-controlled House seats in Pennsylvania. Mackenzie narrowly ousted incumbent Democrat Susan Wild to represent parts of the Lehigh Valley, Carbon County and a small portion of Monroe County.
Republican Rob Bresnahan also defeated Democratic incumbent Matt Cartwright in northeastern Pennsylvania.
Mackenzie ran a campaign focused on the economy, inflation and border issues. He represents one of the most purple districts in the commonwealth, having topped Wild in the November election by a little over 4,000 votes.
Rep. Herb Conaway (D-NJ-3)
A longtime lawmaker, Herb Conaway has represented New Jersey’s 7th District in the state assembly since 1998, most recently serving as deputy speaker since 2022. Conaway won the Garden State’s 3rd District Congressional seat [vacated by Andy Kim who won one of the state’s Senate seats] with 53.2% of the vote in November.
According to his campaign website, Conaway holds a medical degree from Jefferson Medical College and a law degree from Rutgers Camden.
Rep. Sarah McBride (D-DE)
Sarah McBride makes history, becoming the first openly transgender member of the United States Congress. A member of the Delaware State Senate since 2021, McBride won the First State’s only congressional seat with nearly 58% of the vote in November.
A Wilmington native, McBride worked in the Obama White House and later served as the national spokesperson for the Human Rights Campaign. Her priorities laid out in her campaign were expanding access to health care, tackling economic issues and ensuring access to reproductive healthcare.
But McBride’s initial reception in Congress has already been rocky, as transgender rights have become a flashpoint in several Republican-led states.
Congresswoman Nancy Mace, a Republican from South Carolina, proposed banning transgender people from U.S. Capitol bathrooms.
McBride brushed off the situation, saying in a statement, “I’m not here to fight about bathrooms.”
“This effort to distract from the real issues facing this country hasn’t distracted me over the last several days, as I’ve remained hard at work preparing to represent the greatest state in the union come January,” McBride wrote in a November post on X.
Sen. Dave McCormick (R-PA)
Republicans were able to retake control of the U.S. Senate due to some key flipped seats, including Dave McCormick‘s win in Pennsylvania. The West Point graduate ousted longtime incumbent Democrat Bob Casey for his Senate seat in November, winning an extremely narrow election by just 0.2%.
It was McCormick’s second time running for a U.S. Senate seat in the commonwealth. McCormick lost to Mehmet Oz in the GOP Senate primary during the 2022 election, a race ultimately won by Democrat John Fetterman.
“The one message we heard over and over again was ‘we need change,’” said McCormick while declaring victory in the tight race in November. “We need leadership to get our economy back on track, to get this horrific inflation under control. We need leadership to secure the border, to stop this scourge of fentanyl.”
McCormick campaigned heavily with President-elect Trump in the key battleground state throughout the 2024 cycle. His campaign featured several top Trump priorities, including issues related to inflation, and securing the U.S.-Mexico border. As a veteran, McCormick, on his campaign site, says it’s also a priority for him to “restore America’s military might.”
Changing Roles
Sen. Andy Kim (D-NJ)
Andy Kim of New Jersey isn’t new to Washington, but he’ll be taking on a new role starting in 2025. The three-term congressman in November became the Garden State’s first Asian American senator. Kim will also be the first Korean American to serve in the U.S. Senate.
The former congressman will also be the first senator from South Jersey in 70-plus years.
Kim won the seat vacated by longtime Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez following his conviction on federal corruption charges. The former congressman garnered 53.6% of the vote, topping Republican businessman Curtis Bashaw.
Kim ran on a platform of supporting small businesses and growing jobs, expanding access to health care, making raising a family more affordable and restoring faith in government following the Menendez indictment.
“It’s important to make sure we step in quickly and to be able to show that we are moving in a different direction, that this is a new era of politics in New Jersey,” Kim told CBS News Philadelphia in December.
The senator was sworn in early, on Dec. 9, after New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy appointed him to the seat following his election certification. He replaced George Helmy, who served for several months after Menendez resigned.
Sen. Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-DE)
Another local member of Congress is moving across the U.S. Capitol and is making history in the process.
Lisa Blunt Rochester, who held Delaware’s lone congressional seat since 2017, becomes the state’s first woman and first person of color elected to the U.S. Senate. Blunt Rochester defeated Republican Eric Hansen in November, garnering 56.6% of the vote.
She takes over for longtime Democratic Sen. Tom Carper who opted not to seek reelection.
Blunt Rochester’s campaign focused on health care reforms, economic issues and social equality. But the lawmaker has also put a focus on bipartisanship, and in her exit from the House, put out a call for legislators to work together to get things done.
“If we are to build a democracy, a planet, and a future that endures, it will take each and every one of us doing our part,” said Blunt Rochester in her farewell remarks on the U.S. House floor in December.
Pennsylvania
Biden kills U.S. Steel deal; what Trump said and what it means for Pennsylvania
Biden blocks Japanese takeover of U.S. Steel
President Biden is blocking the proposed $14 billion acquisition of U.S. Steel by Nippon Steel.
Fox – 10 Phoenix
President Joe Biden’s decision to block Nippon Steel’s bid to buy U.S. Steel could have significant implications for Pennsylvania and the steel industry.
President-elect Donald Trump had already said he would kill the deal when he takes office later this month to keep a foreign firm from taking over the Pittsburgh-based business.
U.S. Steel employs thousands across its plants and offices in Pennsylvania and the state has about 10% of the nation’s steelworkers.
For them, Biden’s intervention could mean short-term job stability, as the administration emphasizes keeping the company under American ownership.
But, it’s not a fix for U.S. Steel’s problems; the company has said it needs financial resources to upgrade plants and keep pace with demand for steel around the world.
Biden on Friday issued the order blocking Nippon Steel Corp.’s proposed $14.9 billion purchase of U.S. Steel, citing his presidential authority under the Defense Production Act of 1950 and calling the steel industry “critical for resilient supply chains.”
Nippon and U.S. Steel, however, took exception to the order.
In a joint statement, U.S. Steel and Nippon Steel said it was “dismayed” by Biden’s decision, calling it “a clear violation of due process and the law governing CFIUS.”
The companies said blocking the sale will deny billions of dollars in investments planned in the U.S. and vowed to take “all appropriate action to protect our legal rights.”
(This story was updated to add new information.)
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