By Peter Hall | Pennsylvania Capital-Star

Credit: Christopher Millette/PennLive
A group of Pennsylvania voters, backed by state and national Republican groups, have asked the state Supreme Court to declare that undated or incorrectly dated mail-in ballots cannot be counted in the Nov. 8 election.
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The filing late Sunday night came just over three weeks before the Nov. 8 election when voters will choose Pennsylvaniaโs next governor and U.S. senator. And itโs been a weekย since the U.S. Supreme Courtย threw out a federal appeals court rulingย that undated ballots must be counted.
The suit asks the court to invoke its Kingโs Bench power to take up the matter without lower courts first weighing in because the question of whether to count mail-in ballots without handwritten dates needs to be resolved before the election.
โThere is not sufficient time for the โordinary processes of lawโ to resolve the issues presented โฆโ before counties begin the process of preparing to count mail-in ballots on Election Day, the claimants wrote in their filing.
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At a minimum, the lawsuit asks the Supreme Court to order counties to segregate mail-in ballots returned without dates to avoid a scenario in which some counties count them and others do not, diluting the votes of those who follow the rules correctly.
โAny counting of ballots that the General Assembly has declared invalid โ and the lack of statewide uniformity in the treatment of undated or incorrectly dated ballots โ are eroding public trust and confidence in the integrity of Pennsylvaniaโs elections at a vital moment in the Nationโs and the Commonwealthโs history,โ the suit reads.
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The question of whether undated ballots should be counted has been an issue in every election since 2020, when voters were first permitted to vote by mail without an excuse. In at least one instance, undated ballots have determined the outcome of an election by a razor-thin margin.
The 2019 amendment to Pennsylvaniaโs Election Code allowing no-excuse absentee voting states that voters โshall โฆ fill out, sign and dateโ a declaration on the outside of the return envelope.
The state Supreme Court ruled in 2020 that undated ballots should be counted in that election because the instructions for completing a mail-in ballot were unclear. But they could not be counted in future elections.
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A federal appeals court ruled earlier this year that undated ballots should be counted because the date requirement violates a bar on disenfranchising voters over paperwork errors.
The U.S. Supreme Court last week threw out the appeals court decision without weighing in on the question because the underlying election โ a 2021 judicial race in Lehigh County โ had been decided and the case was moot.
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The latest rulings on the matter in a pair of Commonwealth Court decisions stemming from this yearโs U.S. Senate primary race say undated ballots should be counted because Pennsylvania courts have consistently found the word โshallโ in the Election Code means something is mandatory only when it is essential to the integrity of an election.
Among the arguments in the lawsuit is one that is also before the U.S. Supreme Court in a closely watched North Carolina congressional redistricting case.
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The Republican voters and groups, including the Republican National Committee, the National Republican Congressional Committee and the state Republican Party, contend that the U.S. Constitution vests the power to set rules for elections with each state legislature.
โThus, neither the Commonwealth Court nor this Court may erode, much less set aside, the General Assemblyโs mandatory date requirement as applied to federal elections. The Court should grant the Application and uphold the date requirement,โ the lawsuit reads .
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The Republicans argue that the use of the word โshallโ alone should be enough to indicate that the Legislature intended the date requirement to be mandatory.
But they add that the date requirement also serves the purpose of showing when a voter actually completed the ballot.
The lawsuit points out one instance in which it prevented a fraudulent ballot from being counted when a Lancaster County woman charged with forging her motherโs ballot dated it nearly two weeks after her motherโs death.
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The suit argues that the date requirement is not barred by federal law, which only prohibits requirements that deny a personโs right to vote. A failure to follow the rules for voting is a forfeiture of the right to vote, the Republicans contend.
The claimants also argue that acting Secretary of State Leigh Chapmanโs guidance directing county election officials to include undated ballots in their counts goes against the General Assemblyโs intent and should be set aside.
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