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A. Pennsylvania Department of State: Central Authority
- Oversees statewide election administration, campaign finance, and lobbying disclosure.
- Houses the Bureau of Elections, which issues guidance, certifies results, and monitors counties.
- Maintains statewide voter registration (SURE system), ensuring uniform registration rules across 67 counties.
- Enforces election security: data encryption, multi-factor authentication, continuous monitoring of the registration and voting system.
B. Election Law Advisory Board & Statutory Review (Act 12)
- Created under Act 12 of 2020, this board reviews election law, proposes statutory/improvements, and studies new voting technologies.
- Comprised of legislative leaders plus appointees representing disabilities, voting rights, and county election officials.
C. County Autonomy & Decentralized Administration
- Pennsylvania’s election administration is decentralized: state sets guardrails, counties (like Allegheny) implement.
- Counties maintain significant discretion on details not fully prescribed by law:
- Where to place drop boxes.
- Whether to allow voters to “cure” flawed mail ballots in certain ways.
- Specific policies for poll worker deployment, precinct boundaries, and early voting logistics.
D. Ballot Security, Audits & Certification
- All 67 counties begin pre-canvassing of received mail/absentee ballots at 7 a.m. on Election Day.
- Counties must conduct two audits before certification:
- A 2% statistical audit under state statute.
- A risk-limiting audit (RLA) across the state.
- Certification is time-sensitive: the state must finalize and certify presidential electors’ slate by a federal deadline (per ECRA) – December 11 in presidential years.
- State may decertify or refuse third-party access to voting machines to preserve uniformity and security.
E. Election Officers, Poll Workers & Training
- Pennsylvania legal term: “election officers” (includes judges of elections, clerks, inspectors).
- Duties: check in voters, run machines, secure ballots, deliver returns.
- Eligibility rules and impartiality required; counties vet and train workers.
- Because counties vary in resources and protocols, performance depends heavily on local administration.
F. Legal Oversight & Conflict Resolution
- Challenges and recounts may be adjudicated in state courts.
- The state’s election code (dating from 1937, with amendments) forms the statutory backbone of all procedures.
- The state’s Attorney General enforces election law violations, voter protection cases, and fraud claims.
- Judicial intervention can override county practices when inconsistent with state law or constitutional standards (as seen in voting machine decertification cases).
G. Reforms & Emerging Issues
- Pennsylvania is replacing its outdated SURE registration system with a new Civix election management system (>$10M investment).
- Election security threats, staffing shortages, and partisan pressure are ongoing challenges.
- The Advisory Board (Act 12) continues proposing updates to resolve statutory ambiguity, especially around drop boxes, ballot curing, and technology standards.