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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsNYT gets fact-checked on Pennsylvania election story
By Sarah K. Burris
Published November 06, 2022
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The New York Times is being fact-checked by local Philadelphia Inquirer reporter Jonathan Lai, who claims that a recent report of theirs was false.
According to the Times, "the agency that runs elections in Philadelphia offered replacement ballots in the midterm elections to more than 2,000 voters whose ballots would be invalidated by a recent ruling by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court."
The ruling the Times is referring to is a recent one saying that voters who don't put the dates can't be counted. Allowing voters to fix those dates is allowed and those ballots would then be counted.
https://www.rawstory.com/pennsylvania-election-new-york-times/
blue neen
(12,324 posts)stopdiggin
(11,320 posts)is perhaps marginally more explanatory - than the Time tweet referenced. With the important part - that election officials are notifying people and offering methods of 'fixing' or rectifying undated ballots, rather than outright rejecting without recourse - being fairly well covered by both sources.
So, while the story might clarify that ballots without dates can't be counted, it leaves out the fact that those ballots could be correct. (ed?)
- snip - As Lai explained, with links to local news reports, the state Supreme Court decision ruled that helping people fix their ballots does not invalidate them and it's legal according to the ruling.
The Philadelphia City Commissioners posted on the city website a list of voters whose ballots lacked the correct date or a signature. Those voters were then instructed to go to City Hall on Sunday, Monday or Tuesday to request a replacement ballot and avoid "potential rejection" of the ballot.
Voters on these lists may instead cast a provisional ballot, but should only do so if the voter is unable to request a replacement ballot at City Hall prior to the end of Election Day, the commission said in the statement.
This case began in the lower courts after the GOP sued to stop counties from contacting voters about mistakes on their ballots and allowing them to fix the ballots. The judge, in that case, ruled against the Republican's opposition.