SCOTUS Decision ‘Underscores’ How Democrats Undermined Elections

underscores

The Senate Majority Leader in the state of Pennsylvania is calling out a SCOTUS decision that he says “underscores” how Democrats have very much undermined the voting system.

SCOTUS Underscores Election Integrity

In a Supreme Court ruling, mail-in ballots that arrived after Election Day in the battleground state of Pennsylvania must be separated from ballots that arrived before November 3.

Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman said that Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar did not handle the undermining of the electoral system properly.

He said:

The U.S. Supreme Court affirmed what we have been saying — Secretary Boockvar changed the rules for the counties after telling the Court that ballots would only be segregated. The Court said it was not aware the Secretary’s original guidance, which had an ‘important bearing on the question whether to order special treatment of the ballots in question had been modified.’

The constantly changing guidance has resulted in inconsistent handling of ballots across the counties. Her actions are nothing but a partisan effort to cause chaos and mistrust.

Republican Leaders Fight Back

Both Corman and Pennsylvania Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati (R) called on her to resign for her handling which underscores election integrity.

The Republican leaders said that Boockvar “fundamentally altered” its formal and informal guidance for the November 3 elections.

Another Day – Another Fight

They wrote in a statement this week:

Twice in the last two days, the Secretary of State has fundamentally altered the manner in which Pennsylvania’s election is being conducted. The constantly changing guidance she has delivered to counties not only directly contradicts the Election Code language she is sworn to uphold, but also conflicts her own litigation statements and decisions of both the Pennsylvania Supreme Court and the United States Supreme Court.

Secretary Boockvar told the U.S. Supreme Court on October 28 that ballots received after 8 p.m. on November 3 would be segregated, but she changed the rules on November 1 and directed counties to canvass those ballots as soon as possible upon receipt. In some counties, it is not possible to both segregate and canvass ballots as directed. This directive leaves open the possibility that timely votes will be commingled with votes received after 8 p.m. on Election Day, despite the fact that these votes remain the subject of litigation before the United States Supreme Court.

The Department changed the rules again on November 2 when they provided last-second guidance directing counties to provide information to help voters whose mail-in or absentee ballots were incorrectly completed so those voters could vote on a provisional ballot. The late release of this “guidance” resulted in inconsistent application across the counties — some of whom contacted voters as directed and some who did not. There is no basis for this guidance in current law. The Secretary created this new process out of thin air.

1 comment
  1. Can you get this information to Fox news who is beginning to block out information due to ‘no evidence of fraud’!
    Thank you for your hard work.

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