The ruling in the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania applied to
the Philadelphia and Allegheny Counties.
Officials disqualified nearly 16,000 mail-in ballots for
irregularities during April's primary election. Almost half were
disqualified because of issues like missing signatures and wrong
dates on outer envelopes, according to the New York Times.
"The refusal to count undated or incorrectly dated but timely
mail ballots submitted by otherwise eligible voters because of
meaningless and inconsequential paperwork errors violates the
fundamental right to vote recognized in the free and equal
elections clause (of the state constitution)," Judge Ellen
Ceisler wrote in the opinion.
Pennsylvania is a key battleground state in a tight presidential
race for the Nov. 5 U.S. elections in which Democratic Vice
President Kamala Harris faces Republican former President Donald
Trump.
Battleground states are those where elections were won by a
narrow margin of 3 percentage points or even less in the last
contest. Pennsylvania is one of seven such states.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Himani
Sarkar)
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