HARRISBURG, PA – Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections (RITE), a nonprofit organization that supports litigation to protect the rule of law in elections, has urged the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania to ensure the faithful execution of the state’s voter registration laws.
The case challenges a Pennsylvania Department of State directive instructing county officials to accept voter registration applications even when key identifying information, such as a driver’s license number or partial Social Security number, does not match government records.
RITE argues that this directive directly conflicts with Pennsylvania law, which requires officials to make reasonable efforts to verify missing or inconsistent information, and then reject applications that remain unresolved.
RITE is appealing a December 8, 2025 ruling from a divided Commonwealth Court that agreed the plaintiff county election commissioner has standing to challenge the Directive, but ruled 2 to 1 that the Directive was consistent with state law and was not an illegal, unpromulgated regulation.
“Voters expect election officials to follow the law and so does RITE,” said RITE President Justin Riemer. “State law is clear: voter registration applications must be complete and accurate before they are accepted. The Department’s directive flips that process on its head by requiring acceptance first and verification later.”
The brief also argues that the directive is unlawful because it operates as a binding rule that the Department never properly adopted through the state’s rulemaking process, raising concerns about executive overreach in election administration.
RITE continues to support litigation and investigations nationwide to ensure the integrity of our voter registration processes.