To register to vote in Pennsylvania, an applicant must be a citizen of the United States for at least one month before the next election, a resident of the district in which he or she is registering for at least 30 days before the next election, and at least 18 years old by the day of the next election.
A primary election is an election in which registered voters select a candidate that they believe should be a political party's candidate for elected office to run in the general election. They are also used to choose convention delegates and party leaders. Primaries are state-level and local-level elections that take place prior to a general election. Pennsylvania utilizes a closed primary process. Voters are required to register with a political party to vote in the primary election.
Ballotpedia also covers all elections in the U.S. territories but not elections in other countries.
Ballotpedia provides comprehensive ballot coverage of municipal elections in the nation's 100 largest cities by population, including races for trial court judgeships and county offices that overlap them. Ballotpedia also covers the nation's 200 largest public school districts by student enrollment and all school districts overlapping the top 100 cities by population.
As of April 2021, 38 states and the District of Columbia permitted early voting. Early voting permits citizens to cast ballots in person at a polling place prior to an election .
Recent voting reforms established a new convenient way for Pennsylvanians to vote: mail-in ballots.
You can register to vote if you’re: A United States citizen at least 30 days before the next election. A resident of Pennsylvania and your election district for at least 30 days before the next election. At least 18 years of age on the day of the next election.
Mark your ballot. Place your ballot in the white inner secrecy envelope labeled “official ballot.”. Note: Your ballot will not be counted if it is not in the secrecy envelope. Put the sealed inner secrecy envelope into the pre-addressed outer return envelope where the voter must sign and seal it.
Voters have the option to request to be added to the Annual Mail-in Voter List, otherwise known as a permanent voter list. If you are on this list you will receive an application to renew your absentee or mail-in ballot request each year.
The Pennsylvania Department of State provides Pennsylvanians an online portal for viewing election returns in real-time as reports are received from the Commonwealth’s 67 counties on Election Day.
If you’re mailing a signed voter registration application, it must be received by your county election office 15 days before an election.
Drop it off at a designated county board of election drop box location.
The elections occur during the midterms, which are typically in May. If no candidate gets more than half the vote, the two candidates with the most votes have a runoff. The runoff election is in November. In any given year, at least a third of the District Attorneys are up for re-election. Register to vote or update your address at the Secretary ...
If you have moved since the last time you voted, the address on your voter registration needs to be updated. Even if you are certain that you have voted since the last time you moved, you may wish to check. It’s a good idea to double check that the Secretary of State’s office has your correct information and voting address.
654 authorized the voters of each of Pennsylvania's counties to elect one person, of requisite legal background to serve as district attorney for a term of three years. The term was extended to four years under the State Constitution of 1874, Article 14.
The district attorney is an elected office, and terms begin on the first Monday in January following the election. Prior to 1850, the functions of this office were performed by a deputy state attorney-general. An Act of 3 May 1850 P.L. 654 authorized the voters of each of Pennsylvania's counties to elect one person, ...
The office of the District Attorney of Philadelphia is the largest prosecutor's office in the state of Pennsylvania and oversees a jurisdiction that includes more than 1.5 million citizens of both the city and county of Philadelphia.
Democratic (Appointed district attorney to finish out the four-year term of Victor Blanc, who had been named a judge, later a longtime Commonwealth Court Judge, himself.) Arlen Specter.
1880–1899. Republican (Elected Nov. 2, 1880, declined to be a candidate in 1899, later elected to the US House of Representatives in 1912) P. Frederick Rothermel.