Next month's election, voters get to decide if they want to retain three Justices on Pennsylvania's Supreme Court. WESA politics editor Chris Potter helps make sense of the vote.
The last day in Pennsylvania to register to vote for this election is October 20. You may also realize there are other issues and possibly case law. So, this is an update with some new information from recent case law and practice.
Matthew Wolford (R) and Stella Tsai (R) diverge on what they see as the most pressing concerns facing the court. Michael Wojcik (D) is up for a retention vote.
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As Election Day, Nov. 4, grows closer, one race in Pennsylvania will decide the fate of the Supreme Court moving forward, and possibly the 2028 presidential race. While there are numerous issues on the ballot across both the Commonwealth and the United States come Election Day,
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This weekend, Allegheny County will open four satellite voting locations where residents can request a mail-in ballot and submit it on the spot.
Brandon Neuman, Maria Battista and Daniel Wassmer are vying for an open seat, while Judge Alice DuBow is up for a retention vote.
It’s just that this year, partisan politics hang on retention elections like TP on trees at Halloween. Ironic given retentions, with no opponents, no party affiliation on the ballot, were adopted, as the Pennsylvania League of Women Voters proposed 58 years ago, to “help keep the courts out of politics and politics out of the courts.”