BY GQ PAN
Election
workers count ballots at the Philadelphia Convention Center in Philadelphia,
Pa., on Nov. 6, 2020. (Chris McGrath/Getty Images)
The Pennsylvania House
of Representatives voted Thursday to approve a resolution that establishes a non-partisan audit of
the 2020 general election, in an effort to restore the public’s faith in the
state’s future elections.
The resolution passed in a largely party line vote of
112–90, reported Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. It allows the Legislative Budget
and Finance Committee (LBFC), which is made up by an equal number of
Republicans and Democrats from the state House and Senate, to examine the
election procedures to both confirm the accuracy of the results as well as
provide suggestions for improvement.
The Republicans generally voted in favor of the audit,
arguing that a review of the state’s election system is necessary, especially
after the confusion and chaos stemming from this year’s high-turnout election
with large-scale mail-in voting.
State Rep. Jesse Topper (R), the prime sponsor of the
resolution, noted that the audit is not about questioning the results of the
2020 election, but to scrutinize the process to guarantee integrity in future
elections.
“Elections are the bedrock of our form of government,”
Topper said in a statement. “I firmly believe that this risk-limiting
audit by the LBFC, much like similar audits being conducted in other states,
will provide a statistical level of confidence in not only the outcome of this
past election, but ensure trust in all future elections here in the
Commonwealth.”
While the Pennsylvania Department of State does conduct
its own audit of every election, which is based on small sample sizes, the LBFC
risk-limiting audit would include much larger samples, according to state Rep.
Bryan Cutler (R).
“Pennsylvania voters saw a much different election when
filling out ballots in November,” Cutler said in a statement. “Every county used new voting machines
after Gov. [Tom] Wolf decertified every machine in the state over security
concerns, or millions of people voted by mail for the first time. A thorough
audit tests assumptions, confirms accuracy, and restores faith in our process
for every Pennsylvanian.”
The Democrats mostly rejected the measure, arguing that
the LBFC doesn’t have the authority to conduct such an audit.
“The Legislative Budget and Finance Committee has no
expertise or role in election administration and no statutory authority outside
the fiscal realm, and it is inappropriate to pretend it does,” Governor Tom
Wolf, a Democrat, said in a statement. “An audit by the LBFC would be
incomplete, duplicative, and unreliable.”
“Interference by partisan legislators in Harrisburg is
wrong,” Wolf added. “It creates chaos and confusion and should be rejected. A
reliable audit conducted by election experts is the best way for all
Pennsylvanians to trust the results of this election.”