Elections 101: Everything you need to know about election recounts in Pennsylvania
Spotlight PA link: https://www.spotlightpa.org/news/2024/06/pennsylvania-election-recounts-explainer-donald-trump-joe-biden/
In 2020, former President Donald Trumps campaign paid $3 million so Wisconsin would recount votes in two counties. The result: Joe Bidens lead grew by 87 votes. Such a recount would not be possible in Pennsylvania. Here, a recount is automatically ordered if a statewide race falls within a certain margin. Voters can also initiate recounts in their own precincts.
With another highly contentious rematch between the two on the table for this November, an automatic recount cannot be ruled out. In recent years, supporters of losing candidates have also initiated precinct-level recounts that have little chance of changing a races outcome but can be used to disrupt the election process.
Here is what you need to know about how recounts work in Pennsylvania: There are at least two ways a recount can be initiated in Pennsylvania. Under Pennsylvania law, a recount is automatically triggered for a statewide race if the margin of victory lies within half a percent, and the state and counties pay for the effort. This last happened in the 2022 primary race for the Republican U.S. Senate nominee.
Three voters in a precinct can also request a recount based on their belief that fraud or error occurred. Such a recount only affects ballots cast in the voters precinct, which is the smallest voting district, usually just a few hundred voters and sometimes no larger than a city block.
- more at link -
Spotlight PA reports that recounts that change the results of the election are extremely rare, but they can happen. In Pennsylvania our problem is that the cost of initiating a recount is only $50 - and it has never been changed since 1927. That makes it all to easy and inexpensive for troublesome parties to create a logjam at County Election offices, and for the state.