The recount underway in Pennsylvania’s U.S. Senate race marks the end of a chaotic post-election period that has become the latest example of how disputed election rules can expose weak points in a core function of American democracy.
In a statement urging adherence to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision, Shapiro said: "The rule of law matters in Pennsylvania."
These counties were ordered to not count illegal ballots after election officials voted to count ballots missing dates — in other words, ballots that did not comply with require
Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro came out Monday and sided with the state's supreme court over a ruling about the counting of mail-in ballots.
The Keystone State's top court reaffirmed that certain mail-in ballots cannot be counted, in a blow to certain Democrat-led counties.
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court on Monday rebuked Democratic-controlled elections boards that counted undated and misdated mail ballots, siding with Republicans and reiterating that such votes are invalid.
Republicans are going to court in Pennsylvania amid vote counting in the U.S. Senate election between Democratic Sen. Bob Casey and Republican David McCormick, with the contest headed toward a state-m
Republican Dave McCormick leads Democratic Sen. Bob Casey by about 28,000 votes, under the 0.5-percentage-point threshold for an automatic recount under state law.
Pennsylvania Republicans took to the polls in the May 2022 primary and nominated celebrity physician Dr. Mehmet Oz their Senate candidate. Oz eked out that victory by just 940
The race is headed toward a statewide recount as former hedge-fund CEO Dave McCormick declares victory and Senator Bob Casey declines to concede.
Democratic turnout for Vice President Kamala Harris lagged 2020 turnout as Donald Trump made gains all over the state, especially in rural counties.