A worker carries a box of ballots to count for the 2020 Presidential election at the Philadelphia Convention Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., on Tuesday, Nov.
3, 2020. Philadelphia officials said Monday it "will easily take several days" t HARRISBURG, Pa. - Republicans have sued again in an attempt to throw out Pennsylvania's broad mail-in voting law, even as the state's highest court considers a separate lawsuit aimed at wiping out a law that lost favor with Republicans following former President Donald Trump's baseless claims about election fraud.It is the latest fight over voting laws in a political battleground state.
The lawsuit comes barely two months before voters can send in mail-in ballots in the fall election featuring high-profile contests for governor and the U.S.
Senate.The suit, filed Wednesday in the Commonwealth Court by 14 state Republican lawmakers, contends that the court must invalidate the law because of a provision written into it that says it is "void" if any of its requirements are struck down in court.The lawsuit says the "non-severability" provision was triggered in a May 20 decision by a panel of the 3rd U.S.