Election Challenges Filed in Towamencin Township Supervisors Race

Montgomery County’s 2023 general election results were
certified Monday despite objections to exclude the Towamencin
Township Board of Supervisors race.

The meeting began with public comment from Goldstein Law
Partners attorney Britain Henry, who spoke on behalf of “a collective of
petitioners who filed a petition this morning contesting the certification of
the Towamencin Township supervisor race.”

“We do not at this time have a recount or a re-canvass
petition,” said county Senior Assistant Solicitor John Marlatt. “A petition of
an election contest is a petition of a different type and not one that should
delay the board moving forward to vote on certification … this afternoon.”

While ballot counting and tabulation proceedings wrapped up
on Nov. 14, a Nov.
22 ruling from the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania
 delayed
the certification of the 2023 general election results in Montgomery County.
The order required “undated and improperly dated mail-in ballots” be counted.

There were 349 ballots impacted locally, according to a
Montgomery County spokesperson. Marlatt said the “canvas and tabulation board
reconvened on Nov. 27” and completed their work on Nov. 28, which was followed
by a mandatory five-day waiting period “for any parties to file recount
petitions.”

Concerning the Towamencin Township race, updated vote totals
posted Nov. 27 showed Towamencin supervisor Rich Marino, a Republican
incumbent, and challenger Kofi Osei, a Democrat, tied with 3,035 votes each in
the race for the seat currently held by Marino.

Marino and Osei then participated in the drawing of lots
held on Nov. 30 in Norristown. The proceedings, mandated by state law, dictated
the candidate who chose the lower number would be deemed the winner. Osei chose
number 15 and Marino chose 28.

“It’s crazy. There’s been a lot happening in Towamencin. So
to end on a drawing of lots is definitely crazy,” Osei told MediaNews Group
following the drawing.

“My feeling is at this point is that I did not lose the
election…I just picked the wrong number,” Marino said last week.

Marlatt told county election board members the Republican
National Committee also filed litigation on Friday, requesting “a stay of
certification of the Towamencin race from the district court.”

“As of the time of this meeting a stay has not been
ordered,” Marlatt said. “Mr. Marino has filed an election contest in the court
of common pleas and has also requested a stay there. Again, as of the time of
this meeting, a stay has not been ordered.”

In addition to the Towamencin Township race, Marlatt said a
recount petition was filed for the Ward 5 seat on the Lower Moreland Township
Board of Commissioners. He said there was no change recorded in the vote
total. County
election results
 revealed Republican Dennis J. Mueller won the race
with 363 votes over Democrat Dharshini Chakkaravarthi’s 358 votes. One write-in
vote was also recorded.

The election results were certified in a 2-1 roll call vote.
Montgomery County Board of Elections Chairman Ken Lawrence Jr. and Vice
Chairman Judge Daniel Clifford voted in favor of the action, while Commissioner
Joe Gale opposed it.

This article appears courtesy of a content share
agreement between North Penn Now and The Reporter. To read more stories like
this, visit 
www.thereporteronline.com.

See also:

Towamencin
NOPE Founder Kofi Osei Beats Incumbent Supervisor Rich Marino in Drawing of
Lots

Towamencin
Supervisors Race Tied After Montgomery County Election Update

Towamencin
‘Common Interest Agreement’ Prompts Sewer Sale Sparring

Towamencin’s
2024 Draft Budget Carries Sewer Rate Increase, No Tax Increase

Election
Results: North Penn School Board, Local Municipal Races

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