With Election Day looming, legal battles shaping how ballots are cast and counted in Pennsylvania show no sign of letting up.
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled Friday that mail-in ballots with incorrect dates will not be counted in November, reversing a previous ruling from a lower court in the battleground state.
WASHINGTON, Sept 13 (Reuters) - The Pennsylvania ... ruling from almost two weeks ago that had said the two most populous counties of the battleground state will not be able to throw out mail-in ...
One mail ballot case was brought by a coalition of civil rights organizations while another was from the Republican National ...
By Mattathias Schwartz Pennsylvania’s highest court on Friday threw out a lower-court ruling ... over 81,000 votes in 2020. State election officials disqualified nearly 16,000 mail-in ballots ...
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled Friday that mail ... the ruling was a setback for Pennsylvania voters. "These eligible voters who got their ballots in on time should have their votes ...
No, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled this month. Citing procedural issues, the state’s highest court threw out a lower court ruling that had found not counting mail-in ballots in return ...
The November election is rapidly approaching, and so is a crucial deadline for anyone needing to register to vote in ...