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Saturday, April 20, 2024

Pa. Gov. Tom Wolf Lets 7 State Agencies Provide Voter-Registration Forms

'Our goal is to reach all eligible voters, regardless of political party... '

(Joshua Paladino, Headline USA) Pennsylvania Democrat Gov. Tom Wolf will let chaos reign in the upcoming November general election by scattering voter registration forms across innumerable public buildings and seven state bureaucracies, including the agriculture and corrections departments.

“The United States of America was built on the simple idea that a country cannot work for the people if it actually is not run by the people,” Wolf said, WFMZ reported.

Pennsylvania’s Departments of Education, Labor and Industry, Military and Veterans Affairs, Conservation and Natural Resources and State will also have the forms on hand, opening a potential floodgate for mail-in voting that has a history rife with fraud.

With this change, would-be voters can pick up registration forms at state parks, public libraries, farm shows and at other state-run places.

“This is one more way our commonwealth can make voting more accessible and easier for the citizens of Pennsylvania,” Wolf said. “It’s going to support a healthy democracy now and for many years to come.”

These registration forms will come with envelopes and mailing instructions so that voters can sign up to vote without any face-to-face interactions.

State departments will have to advertise voter registration forms. Acting Pennsylvania Secretary of State Leigh Chapman said the state has 1.7 million eligible voters who have not registered.

The state’s bureaucracy has received more than 100,000 voter registration forms from the Pennsylvania State Department, which ordinarily handles these forms by itself.

“Our goal is to reach all eligible voters, regardless of political party,” Chapman said, “including voters who live in urban, suburban and rural areas, young voters, older voters, voters with disabilities and new Pennsylvanians.”

Pennsylvanians can register to vote until Oct. 24, barely two weeks before the Nov. 8 general election.

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