Pennsylvania
Printing Error Affects Mailed Ballots in Pennsylvania County
By GEOFF MULVIHILL and MICHAEL RUBINKAM, Related Press
An error by an organization that prints ballots for a number of Pennsylvania counties made hundreds of mail-in ballots unreadable Tuesday as voters have been deciding hotly contested primaries for governor and U.S. Senate in one of many nation’s most essential battleground states.
Officers in Lancaster County, the state’s sixth most populous, mentioned the issue concerned not less than 21,000 mailed ballots, solely a 3rd of which have been scanning correctly. The glitch will pressure election staff to redo ballots that may’t be learn by the machine, a laborious course of anticipated to take a number of days. Officers within the GOP-controlled county pledged that every one the ballots can be counted finally.
“Residents need to have correct outcomes from elections they usually need to have them on election evening, not days later,” Josh Parsons, a Republican and vice chair of the county board of commissioners, mentioned at a information convention. “However due to this, we’re not going to have ultimate election outcomes from these mail ballots for most likely a number of days, in order that may be very, very irritating to us.”
The Lancaster Board of Elections, of which Parsons is a member, renewed its criticism of a 2019 state voting legislation that expanded mail-in balloting however prevented counties from opening mailed ballots earlier than Election Day to verify for errors.
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The board mentioned the legislation, which handed the legislature with bipartisan help, additionally forces counties to make use of distributors to print ballots relatively than doing them in home.
“Act 77 is untenable for us as counties to proceed to work in elections and never have issues like this,” mentioned Ray D’Agostino, chairman of the Lancaster board.
The seller’s error left county officers with the duty of getting to hand-mark hundreds of recent ballots, a course of that was anticipated to start out Wednesday morning. For ballots that received’t scan, county election staff will recreate voters’ decisions on clean ballots, after which scan these.
Lancaster County had to make use of an identical course of throughout primaries final yr due to a printing error by a unique vendor.
Christa Miller, chief clerk of voter registration, mentioned an elections employee will learn out every voter’s decisions, a second employee will file them on a clean poll, and an observer will be sure the alternatives are marked appropriately.
“Our most important precedence is accuracy and never how briskly we are able to do one thing,” she mentioned.
County officers mentioned the contractor, Claysburg, Pennsylvania-based NPC, despatched the county check ballots with the right ID code, however used the improper code on those despatched to voters.
NPC, which changed the seller fired after final yr’s error, didn’t instantly reply to a message searching for remark. D’Agostino mentioned NPC had taken “full duty.”
The Pennsylvania Division of State mentioned it was conscious of the issue in Lancaster County, which went for Donald Trump by about 16 proportion factors over Joe Biden within the 2020 presidential contest. Spokesperson Ellen Lyon mentioned no different counties have reported comparable points.
Pennsylvania is one among 5 states holding primaries Tuesday, together with Idaho, Kentucky, North Carolina and Oregon.
Officers in Oregon, the place all registered voters obtain a mailed poll, are coping with an identical drawback. About half the ballots despatched to voters in Clackamas County, the state’s third most populous, included a blurry bar code that can’t be learn by ballot-scanning machines.
Groups that embody each Democrats and Republicans are duplicating each poll to allow them to scanned. Ben Morris, a spokesman for the secretary of state’s workplace, mentioned the outcomes may very well be delayed however can be correct.
Clackamas County consists of a part of Oregon’s new sixth Congressional District, shaped after the state gained a U.S. Home seat following the 2020 census.
In North Carolina, election officers have been investigating delays at some polling locations.
Karen Brinson Bell, govt director of the North Carolina State Board of Elections, mentioned officers have been inspecting whether or not voting machine issues delayed ballot openings in three counties — Gates, Warren and Wilson. Officers have been making an attempt to find out whether or not the delays left anybody unable to solid a poll and whether or not voting hours would have to be prolonged.
“With over 2,600 polling locations open and the opportunity of delays in three, I feel that’s a reasonably good batting common,” Bell mentioned throughout a convention name with reporters.
Voters throughout North Carolina solid about 580,000 early ballots, the overwhelming majority of them at in-person polling locations. That is greater than twice as many early ballots solid as throughout the 2018 main.
Bell mentioned the excessive turnout “is indicative, we hope, of North Carolinians’ religion and belief in election officers conducting elections for them.”
Copyright 2022 The Related Press. All rights reserved. This materials might not be printed, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Education Secretary Khalid Mumin is stepping down • Pennsylvania Capital-Star
Pennsylvania Education Secretary Khalid Mumin will resign from his position in Gov. Josh Shapiro’s cabinet next month, the governor’s office announced Friday afternoon.
Mumin was confirmed in June 2023 about six months after Shapiro took office and has presided over some of the administration’s early successes such as increasing funding for K-12 public schools by $1.5 billion over the last two budgets and providing free breakfast for 1.7 million public school students.
Mumin will resign Dec. 6 and Executive Deputy Secretary of Education Angela Fitterer will take over as interim secretary. A statement from Shapiro’s office did not say why Mumin is stepping down.
Shapiro said in a statement that Mumin has dedicated his life and career to ensuring that Pennsylvania children have a quality education that sets them up for success.
“He has led the Pennsylvania Department of Education with passion and integrity. I am grateful for his service to Pennsylvania’s students and educators and wish him great success in his future endeavors,” Shapiro said.
Mumin said it has been the honor of a lifetime to serve as education secretary.
“I began my career as a teacher in a classroom, and those early experiences watching students get excited about learning inspired me to become a principal, a superintendent, and ultimately Secretary of Education, so I could continue to fight for those students to get more support and more opportunities,” Mumin said. “I’m so grateful to Governor Shapiro for this opportunity to lead the Pennsylvania Department of Education and help build a bright future for Pennsylvania’s students and educators.”
State Sen. David Argall (R-Schuylkill), chairman of the Legislature’s education committee, said he wished Mumin the best and added, “I look forward to working with Acting Secretary Fitterer and the governor’s nominee to improve our education system, from Pre-K to graduate school.”
State Rep. Jesse Topper (R-Bedford), the ranking Republican member of the House Education Committee, said that from his point of view in the legislature “there were some definite bumps” during Mumin’s tenure as he presided over transformational change in the department.
“It’s important to understand that running a bureaucracy of that size … is different than being a great superintendent in a school district, big or small,” Topper said. “I think there are times when those coming from the academic world find it a little jolting what they’re going to encounter in the realm of government. I think he found it challenging, as all of these roles are.”
Before Shapiro tapped Mumin for his cabinet, he served as superintendent of the Lower Merion school district in Montgomery County. Mumin, who began his career as a classroom teacher in the Franklin County community of Scotland in 1997, also has served as superintendent of the Reading public schools.
Dan Urevick-Ackelsberg, senior attorney at the Public Interest Law Center, said Mumin’s background gave him a useful perspective on Pennsylvania’s schools. Lower Merion is among the state’s wealthiest communities, while Reading is one of the least.
“He came to office with the experience of seeing everything that Pennsylvania public schools can offer and the kind of disparity that underfunding public schools creates,” Urevick-Acklesberg said, adding that an important part of Mumin’s legacy will be the first steps the commonwealth took toward bringing its public schools into constitutional compliance.
Mumin’s tenure coincided with the resolution of a decade of litigation over the state’s public education funding formula, which a group of school districts, parents and advocates argued put students in less wealthy areas at a disadvantage because of its reliance on property taxes.
A Commonwealth Court judge ordered Shapiro and the General Assembly in February 2023 to correct the inequities and a interbranch commission found the state needed to invest $5.4 billion in underfunded schools to bring them up to par with the state’s most successful school districts.
This year’s budget includes about $526 million toward that goal, but lawmakers were unable to reach a compromise that would guarantee future installments to close the gap.
Sen. Lindsey Williams (D-Allegheny), who is the ranking Democrat on the Senate Education Committee, said she was grateful for Mumin’s service and experience as an educator, which helped the administration and lawmakers achieve shared goals such as strengthening career and technical education programs, investing in student mental health, repairs for schools and providing free menstrual products for students.
The governor’s office also credited Mumin with bringing together higher education leaders together to rethink higher education in Pennsylvania, establishing a state Board of Higher Education to provide more support for public universities and make college education more affordable.
Topper said the Education Department’s communications with the General Assembly were often found lacking by some members. Topper pointed to the higher education reform initiative, which the Shapiro administration billed as “a blueprint for higher education,” that many Republicans criticized for lacking detail or a clear proposal for how it would be funded.
Williams noted that the next four years will bring profound challenges for public education, as President-elect Donald Trump appears poised to eliminate the U.S. Department of Education. This week he appointed professional wrestling executive Linda McMahon to head the agency.
“Given the President-elect’s nominee to head the federal Department of Education, any successor to Secretary Mumin must be prepared to defend Pennsylvania students’ constitutional right to a high-quality inclusive public education,” Williams said.
Fitterer, who will serve in Mumin’s place until Shapiro’s nominee is confirmed in the Senate, has a 25-year career in state government, serving in former Gov. Tom Wolf’s administration, as legislative director for the education department and in crafting public policy in the House and Senate.
(This article was updated about 4 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 22, 2024, to include additional comments.)
Pennsylvania
Democrat Bob Casey concedes Pennsylvania Senate race to Dave McCormick
Pennsylvania Democrat Sen. Bob Casey on Thursday announced he has conceded the race to Republican candidate Dave McCormick more than two weeks after Election Day.
Casey said in a statement that he called McCormick to congratulate him. McCormick’s campaign also independently confirmed the news to Fox News Digital.
“I just called Dave McCormick to congratulate him on his election to represent Pennsylvania in the United States Senate,” Casey said in the statement. “As the first count of ballots is completed, Pennsylvanians can move forward with the knowledge that their voices were heard, whether their vote was the first to be counted or the last.”
“This race was one of the closest in our Commonwealth’s history, decided by less than a quarter of a point. I am grateful to the thousands of people who worked to make sure every eligible vote cast could be counted, including election officials in all 67 counties.”
RNC FILES TWO LAWSUITS IN PENNSYLVANIA AMID SEN BOB CASEY REFUSING TO CONCEDE RACE
The Pennsylvania State Department confirmed that all counties “have completed their initial count of all votes cast, with the exception of ballots under challenge.”
“This is a major step that marks the end of counties’ initial counting processes and signals that counties begin preparing their results for official certification. Thousands of election professionals have been working tirelessly since Nov. 5 to ensure every eligible vote cast by a registered voter is counted accurately. All of Pennsylvania’s election officials deserve our thanks, as well as our continued support while they complete their duties with integrity,” the message said.
The news comes after McCormick edged out Casey by just 17,000 votes to win the Senate seat, according to the most recent unofficial data from the Department of State – putting Casey well within the 0.5% margin of error required under Pennsylvania law to trigger an automatic recount.
That recount began Monday and was slated to end Nov. 26.
The Republican Party blasted Democrats this week for Casey’s refusal to concede the U.S. Senate race in Pennsylvania, taking aim at the three-term incumbent for moving ahead with a costly recount effort, despite their assessment that Casey lacked any achievable path to victory.
They have also criticized the cost, noting that the recount will cost taxpayers an estimated $1 million.
In his statement Thursday, Casey praised the democratic process and voters who turned out in the Keystone State.
“When a Pennsylvanian takes the time to cast a legal vote, often waiting in long lines and taking time away from their work and family, they deserve to know that their vote will count,” Casey said. “That’s democracy.”
Later Thursday, Casey took to X to thank his supporters.
“During my time in office, I have been guided by an inscription on the Finance Building in Harrisburg: ‘All public service is a trust, given in faith and accepted in honor.’”
He added: “Thank you for your trust in me all these years, Pennsylvania. It has been the honor of my lifetime.”
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Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., said the news “hits me.”
“It’s been a supreme honor to have Bob Casey as a colleague, friend, and mentor,” Fetterman said in a statement. “His legacy is a better Pennsylvania. Unassuming while delivering for PA for nearly two decades, he fought for working Pennsylvanians and unions, rural communities, seniors and people with disabilities—all of us. Bob Casey was, is, and always will be Pennsylvania’s best senator.”
EDITOR’S NOTE: This report has been updated to clarify that the Pennsylvania secretary of state had not announced the end of the recount as of Friday morning.
Pennsylvania
First snow of the season hits Western Pennsylvania
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