Governor: Pennsylvania’s Top Election Official Has Resigned
Gov. Tom Wolf says Pennsylvania’s top election official, Secretary of State Pedro Cortes, has resigned.
Oct. 11, 2017, at 5:14 p.m
By MARC LEVY, Associated Press
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) Pennsylvania’s chief election official has resigned, Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf’s office said Wednesday, offering no explanation for the move that surprised top state officials.
Wolf’s administration said Secretary of State Pedro Cortes submitted his resignation but gave no other information in a brief statement. An administration spokesman said he had no additional details about Cortes’ departure.
Wolf nominated Cortes, 51, as his first secretary of state when he took office in 2015. At the time, Cortes, a lawyer, already had the distinction of having held the job longer than anyone else after serving as secretary of state for more than seven years under former Gov. Ed Rendell, also a Democrat.
A telephone message left at Cortes’ Harrisburg home seeking comment was not immediately returned Wednesday. Top state lawmakers and Democratic Party officials said they had no idea Cortes was going to resign and did not know why.
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) Pennsylvanias chief election official has resigned, Democratic Gov. Tom Wolfs office said Wednesday, offering no explanation for the move that surprised top state officials.
Wolfs administration said Secretary of State Pedro Cortes submitted his resignation but gave no other information in a brief statement. An administration spokesman said he had no additional details about Cortes departure.
The move came barely two weeks after Cortes’ agency had heard from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security that Russian hackers unsuccessfully tried to access election systems in the state before last year’s presidential election. Cortes had said he thought the hackers had hoped to alter voter registration records to sow confusion and frustration in the election.
That came on top of complaints by a Philadelphia elections official that people who are in the U.S. legally, but who are not citizens, were mistakenly allowed to register to vote, including some who had voted.
Cortes acknowledged last year that someone who is not a citizen “may inadvertently register” to vote while getting or updating a driver’s license. The department said at the time it was working to correct the problem. The department has declined to say how many non-citizens are registered to vote.