PARNELL et al v. ALLEGHENY COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS et al

  1. October 26, 2020

    Pa. County, GOP Candidates Settle Over 29K Ballot Misprints

    Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, will wait until a Nov. 6 return deadline before it starts counting nearly 29,000 ballots that a vendor had initially misprinted, under a settlement reached with two Republican congressional candidates Sunday.

  2. October 23, 2020

    Pa. Republicans Slam County's Handling Of Misprinted Ballots

    Attorneys for Allegheny County, Pennsylvania and two Republican congressional candidates butted heads Friday over how the county should handle nearly 29,000 misprinted mail-in ballots, with the candidates insisting the incorrect ballots and any replacements that get returned should be treated like provisional ballots, which can be challenged after Election Day without incurring fees.

  3. October 22, 2020

    Pa. Republicans Ask To Preemptively Challenge 29K Votes

    Two Republican congressional candidates in Pennsylvania on Thursday dropped their demand that Allegheny County stop presorting and scanning mail-in ballots after the county said it could delay the vote count, but their federal lawsuit now seeks to preemptively challenge both the nearly 29,000 ballots that a vendor misprinted and reissued and the fees for challenging those ballots.

  4. October 21, 2020

    GOP Hopefuls, Pa. Board At Impasse Over Misprinted Ballots

    Despite prompting from a federal judge, an attorney for two Republican congressional candidates in Pennsylvania told Law360 on Wednesday that he'd reached an impasse in negotiations with local election officials over how to handle mail-in votes received from tens of thousands of Pittsburgh-area residents who were mistakenly sent misprinted ballots.

  5. October 19, 2020

    GOP Candidates In Western Pa. Demand Poll Watchers

    Two Republican congressional candidates in Pennsylvania are urging a federal court to give poll watchers access to "satellite" election offices that have opened up around Pittsburgh, arguing the case is different from one recently decided in Philadelphia because Allegheny County has already reissued nearly 29,000 ballots that had been misprinted.

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