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Voters across the country, like this man in Idaho, went to the polls. (AP Photo/Otto Kitsinger) Voters across the country, like this man in Idaho, went to the polls. (AP Photo/Otto Kitsinger)

Voters across the country, like this man in Idaho, went to the polls. (AP Photo/Otto Kitsinger)

Jon Greenberg
By Jon Greenberg November 4, 2020

No, sign outside a Pennsylvania poll isn’t a voting scam

If Your Time is short

  • A sign outside of a Bucks County, Pa., polling site blurs the Republican candidates’ names.

  • The sign is well labeled as a Democratic sample ballot.

  • There is no evidence the sign broke electioneering rules by being too close to the polling entrance.

A tweet from a Republican activist claims to show Democratic shenanigans at a polling center in Bucks County, Pa.

"Only sign outside Bucks County voting place," Mike Coudrey tweeted Nov. 3. "Democrats shown, republicans blurred out. Meyer Way Park, Bucks County. Warwick township. More scamming in Pennsylvania!"

This isn’t a scam; it’s a run-of-the-mill piece of electioneering material. It would not be permitted if it were within 10 feet of a polling site. There’s no evidence this sign was too close, and journalists on the ground said they saw the same sign at another poll and it was appropriately far enough away.

A photographer with the Bucks County Courier Times went to a poll in the same community and sent PolitiFact this photo.

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A Democratic sign outside a poll in Warwick, Pa. (Anthony DiMattia/Bucks County Courier Times)

The sign bears the headline, "Bucks County Democratic Official Sample Ballot." 

Sample ballots are a staple of Election Day materials. Typically, they are printed as flyers for voters to take with them as they vote. And both Democrats and Republicans use them.

These handouts always highlight the candidates from whichever party printed them. In this instance, the party’s sample ballot is a sign, and it blurs out the Republican candidates, because Democrats don’t want voters to vote for Republicans.

Investigative reporter Crissa Shoemaker DeBree with the Courier Times told us Republicans are handing out their version of sample ballots as flyers. Democrats decided not to do that this year, she said, out of concern for COVID-19.

So, by itself, the sign in the photo is not unusual.

Featured Fact-check

The sign would be illegal if it were too close to the entrance to the poll. Coudrey’s tweet does not prove that it is.

The rule in Pennsylvania is that signs must be at least 10 feet from the polling place. A Courier Times reporter said the signs he saw were 30 feet from the entrance.

We asked Coudrey if he had been to the poll and had taken the picture. He declined to answer. His website says he moved to Los Angeles when he was 20, and his current business address is there. 

Our ruling

A tweet said that there was scamming taking place at a Pennsylvania poll. The evidence was a sign of a sample Democratic ballot.

Such sample ballots are commonplace at polls, and Republicans were handing their versions as flyers. Democrats chose to use signs out of concern for COVID-19. The sign followed the election rules and there is no evidence it was within 10 feet of the polls.

We rate this claim False.

CORRECTION, Nov. 4, 10:40 a.m.: The signs photographed by a local reporter were at a different precinct in the same community in Bucks County. The sign contents were identical. We corrected this piece to clarify the polling location.

This fact check is available at IFCN’s 2020 US Elections FactChat #Chatbot on WhatsApp. Click here, for more.

Our Sources

Mike Coudrey, tweet, Nov. 3, 2020

Twitter exchange, Mike Coudrey, Nov. 3, 2020

Pennsylvania State Code, Regulations in force at polling places, accessed Nov. 3, 2020

Email exchange, Crissa Shoemaker DeBree, Eastern Pennsylvania investigative editor, Bucks County Courier Times, Nov. 3, 2020 

 

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No, sign outside a Pennsylvania poll isn’t a voting scam

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