Pennsylvania counties must have voting machines featuring voter-verifiable, individually audit-able paper ballots in place no later than the presidential primary April 28, 2020, as per the settlement to a lawsuit over the state's election system filed after the 2016 election.
Map by Tom Downing/WITF, database by Emily Previti/PA Post
Emily is a reporter for WITF who’s been covering voting and elections since July 2019 as part of her former role with statehouse accountability news organization PA Post. She was the senior reporter for statewide public media collaboration Keystone Crossroads. Previously, she covered city hall for PennLive/The Patriot-News (Harrisburg, Pa.), was a watchdog and city hall reporter at The Press of Atlantic City and reported for the Northwest Herald. She is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania.
Map by Tom Downing/WITF, database by Emily Previti/PA Post
Pennsylvania counties must have voting machines featuring voter-verifiable, individually audit-able paper ballots in place no later than the presidential primary April 28, 2020, as per the settlement to a lawsuit over the state's election system filed after the 2016 election.
Updated election systems will be in place for two-thirds of Pennsylvania voters in time for next month’s election.
Some counties had purchased voting machines more than a decade ago and were already looking into upgrades before the state decided last year to mandate a mass replacement by all 67 counties.
The deadline to comply isn’t until the presidential primary scheduled for April 28, 2020.
But officials from many counties have said they prefer to launch their new machines during the November municipal elections, since the lower turnout makes any kinks easier to work out and less disruptive to voters and elections staff.
Ultimately, more than two-thirds of Pennsylvania counties will have implemented their new voting systems by next month: Voters in 35 counties will use the new machines for the first time in the November 5 election; ten had launched their upgraded machines for prior elections.
Half of the remaining 22 counties already have contracts in place, are negotiating them, or know what kind of machines they want to acquire.
Voters will fill out ballots by hand Nov. 5 in more than three-quarters of counties. A handful already used that method. But the vast majority are switching from touchscreen machines that recorded and stored votes electronically, according to a PA Post analysis.
This mass upgrade was brought on by a lawsuit filed by 2016 Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein’s campaign over vulnerabilities in Pennsylvania’s election system. Stein’s camp also sued Wisconsin and Michigan for similar reasons.
The lawsuit settlement requires new voting systems to have paper ballots that voters can verify before casting, and that counties can retain for post-election auditing.
Stein’s lawyers cited the “secrecy” of the re-examination and similar concerns about the XL two weeks ago when they moved to reopen the case.
Counties have picked ES&S more than any other vendor. While only three chose the company’s XL model, those counties — Philadelphia, Northampton and Cumberland – represent nearly 20 percent of registered voters in the state.
Editor’s note: The map has been updated to correct information about voting systems in Berks and Chester counties.
A collection of interviews, photos, and music videos, featuring local musicians who have stopped by the WITF performance studio to share a little discussion and sound. Produced by WITF’s Joe Ulrich.