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Kelly's lawsuit before state Supreme Court

A lawsuit challenging mail-in voting, involving two Butler County congressional candidates, now sits before the state Supreme Court after a lower court at least temporarily halted the certification of down-ballot races.

The respondents in the case — the commonwealth, Gov. Tom Wolf and Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar — appealed Wednesday a Commonwealth Court judge's preliminary injunction pending an evidentiary hearing set for Friday morning. After the case was appealed to the state high court, the lower court judge indefinitely postponed the hearing.

The lawsuit, filed by U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly, R-16th, and Sean Parnell, a Republican candidate for the 17th District which includes Beaver County and parts of Butler and Allegheny counties, along with seven Pennsylvania voters, claims Act 77 of 2019, which instituted no-excuse mail-in voting, runs afoul of the Pennsylvania Constitution and, as such, asks the court to toss out votes cast under Act 77's provisions.

Kelly won reelection by about 70,000 votes, according to the Department of State's unofficial results, whereas Parnell, who has refused to concede, trails incumbent Rep. Conor Lamb, a Democrat, by about 10,000 votes.

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