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Al Schmidt passes initial confirmation to be named Secretary of the Commonwealth

  • Ben Wasserstein/WITF
Acting Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt receives questions from the Senate State Government Committee on April 26, 2023 (Ben Wasserstein - WITF)

Acting Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt receives questions from the Senate State Government Committee on April 26, 2023 (Ben Wasserstein - WITF)

Acting Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt’s confirmation is heading to the Senate floor.

A week after his confirmation meeting was abruptly canceled, Schmidt was confirmed Monday by the Senate Small Government Committee with only one opposing vote.

Throughout his hearing, Schmidt was pressed on the security of voting machines to ensure public trust.

“There’s testing that takes place prior to Election Day that the public is permitted to attend, where the public and members of the Board of Elections go through and test their machines to ensure that the votes are scanned,” Schmidt said.

Schmidt was also pressed on changes to voting machines and who would make the judgment on if the machine requires another round of testing.

Voting machines require certification before they can be used, but minor changes do not require a new inspection if they don’t affect the machine’s accuracy, efficiency or capacity, or its compliance with the requirements, according to the Pennsylvania State code.

“The Department of State would make that assessment if the modification to the voting system did in any way impact the items that you described, if they, you know, change the size of the wheels on the voting machine that’s rolled out that would not require recertification,” Schmidt said.

Schmidt, however, has faith in the guardrails in place.

“We’re confident that at the federal and state level, we have those safeguards in place, but election integrity is not something that just ends on one day. It is an ongoing, constant process of making sure that the systems are safeguarded,” said Schmidt.

Schmidt was confirmed by everyone on the committee except State Sen. Doug Mastriano, R-Franklin, who supported Donald Trump’s 2020 election-fraud lie by signing a letter urging members of Congress to delay certifying Pennsylvania’s electoral votes going to Joe Biden. Mastriano was identified as a key figure in the Jan. 6 Select Committee’s investigation because of his actions to help overturn accurate election results e.

Schmidt will need to be confirmed by the Rules & Executive Nominations Committee and the full Senate by Wednesday or he will be confirmed as Secretary of the Commonwealth by default.

Pa. Republican lawmakers and the U.S. Capitol attack

As part of WITF’s commitment to standing with facts, and because the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol was an attempt to overthrow representative democracy in America, we are marking elected officials’ connections to the insurrection.  Read more about this commitment and an update to the policy in 2023.

Sen. Mastriano (R-Franklin) are among the several dozen state lawmakers who signed a letter asking Congress to delay certifying Pennsylvania’s 2020 election result, despite no evidence that would call that result into question.

This supported the election-fraud lie, which led to the attack on the Capitol.

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