Mail-in ballot returns top half a million in PA; 1,821 in Clinton County
By Cassie Miller/Staff Reports
HARRISBURG/LOCK HAVEN, PA – Data on mail-in ballots from the Department of State’s Statewide Uniform Registry of Electors (SURE) system shows that of Nov. 1, Pennsylvania voters requested a total of 1,026,227 absentee and mail-in ballots.
Of that number, 931,145 Pennsylvania voters requested a mail-in ballot and 95,082 voters requested an absentee ballot ahead of the municipal election.
Registered Democrats requested 723,746 mail-in and absentee ballots compared to 215,286 Republicans and 87,195 requests from “other” registered voters.
The same data show that 570,553 voters returned their ballots as of Wednesday morning, including 536,207 mail-in ballots and 34,346 absentee ballots.
Of those ballots returned statewide, 417,829 were ballots from registered Democrats and 114,149 were from those registered as Republicans.
“Other” ballots from unspecified party registration made up 38,575 of the total ballots returned, according to state data.
In Clinton County, according to information provided by county voter registrar Maria Boileau, there were 1,821 applications for mail-in ballots and 1,220 ballots returned to her office as of Thursday morning.
338 applications were received from Lock Haven voters, Woodward Township next with 192, followed by Pine Creek Township with 179 total for its two precincts.
Oct. 31 was the last date to apply for a mail-in ballot and election day, Tuesday, Nov. 7 at 8 p.m. is the last date for county boards of elections to receive mail-in or absentee ballots.
The Department of State asked the public to be “patient” while results are being counted by officials on Nov. 7, reminding voters that Pennsylvania’s election law does not allow counties to begin pre-canvassing mail-in and absentee ballots before 7 a.m. on Election Day.
“Giving election workers time to accurately and securely count each vote is our top priority, and so we ask for patience as we await results,” Secretary of State Al Schmidt said.