Current:Home > InvestPennsylvania counties tell governor, lawmakers it’s too late to move 2024’s primary election date -PureWealth Academy
Pennsylvania counties tell governor, lawmakers it’s too late to move 2024’s primary election date
View
Date:2025-04-15 00:32:40
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Counties in Pennsylvania have told Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro and lawmakers that it is too late to move up the state’s 2024 presidential primary date if counties are to successfully administer the election.
In a letter, the County Commissioners Association of Pennsylvania said there is no longer enough time for counties to handle the tasks associated with moving next year’s primary election from the current date set in law, April 23.
The counties’ association drafted the letter after weeks of efforts by lawmakers to move up the primary date, in part to avoid a conflict with the Jewish holiday of Passover. That became embroiled in partisan and intraparty disagreements after Senate Republicans then touted moving up the date as a way to give the late primary state more say in deciding 2024’s presidential nominees.
County officials say they are planning for 2023’s election, less than five weeks away, and already spent many months of planning around holding 2024’s primary election on April 23.
“While we thank the General Assembly and the administration for their thoughtful discussions around this matter, at this date counties can no longer guarantee there will be sufficient time to make the changes necessary to assure a primary on a different date would be successful,” the organization’s executive director, Lisa Schaefer, wrote in the letter dated Friday.
Schaefer went on to list a number of challenges counties would face.
Those include rescheduling more than 9,000 polling places that are typically contracted a year or more ahead of time, including in schools that then schedule a day off those days for teacher training. Schools would have to consider changing their calendars in the middle of the academic year, Schaefer said.
Counties also would need to reschedule tens of thousands poll workers, many of whom were prepared to work April 23 and had scheduled vacations or other obligations around the date, Schaefer said.
Meanwhile, Pennsylvania — a presidential battleground state won by Democrat Joe Biden in 2020 — is still buffeted by former President Donald Trump’s baseless lies about a stolen election.
Schaefer said county elections staff are facing an increasingly hostile environment that has spurred “unprecedented turnover.”
Changing the presidential primary at this late date would put the state “at risk of having another layer of controversy placed on the 2024 election, as anything that doesn’t go perfectly will be used to challenge the election process and results,” Schaefer said. “This will add even more pressure on counties and election staff, and to put our staff under additional pressure will not help our counties retain them.”
Senate Republicans had backed a five-week shift, to March 19, in what they called a bid to make Pennsylvania relevant for the first time since 2008 in helping select presidential nominees. County election officials had said April 9 or April 16 would be better options.
House Democrats countered last week with a proposal to move the date to April 2. House Republicans opposed a date change, saying it threatened counties’ ability to smoothly administer the primary election.
Critics also suggested that moving up the date would help protect incumbent lawmakers by giving primary challengers less time to prepare and that 2024’s presidential nominees will be all-but settled well before March 19.
___
Follow Marc Levy at twitter.com/timelywriter.
veryGood! (83149)
Related
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Scientists Are Learning More About Fire Tornadoes, The Spinning Funnels Of Flame
- Grisly details emerge from Honduras prison riot that killed 46 women
- Climate Change In California Is Threatening The World's Top Almond Producer
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- 22 Dead, Many Missing After 17 Inches Of Rain In Tennessee
- To Avoid Extreme Disasters, Most Fossil Fuels Should Stay Underground, Scientists Say
- Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York, diagnosed with breast cancer, undergoes surgery
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Record-Breaking Flooding In China Has Left Over One Million People Displaced
Ranking
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Video appears to show Mexican cartel demanding protection money from bar hostesses at gunpoint: Please don't shoot
- A Dutch Approach To Cutting Carbon Emissions From Buildings Is Coming To America
- The Mighty Mangrove
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Rain Fell On The Peak Of Greenland's Ice Sheet For The First Time In Recorded History
- JoJo Siwa Teases New Romance in Message About Her “Happy Feelings”
- For Successful Wildfire Prevention, Look To The Southeast
Recommendation
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
Get $104 Worth of MAC Cosmetics Products for Just $49 To Create an Effortlessly Glamorous Look
Scientists Are Racing To Save Sequoias
Countries Promised To Cut Greenhouse Emissions, The UN Says They Are Failing
Travis Hunter, the 2
Kourtney Kardashian Reflects on Drunken Wedding in Las Vegas With Travis Barker on Anniversary
Flood insurance rates are spiking for many, to account for climate risk
Climate Change Destroyed A Way Of Life On The Once-Idyllic Greek Island Of Evia