Election Results

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Unofficial results for each election—including primary, general, municipal, and special elections— are posted to this page shortly after 8:00 p.m. on election night.

Results are considered official upon certification by the Pennsylvania Department of State. Official results for all past elections (through 2007) can be found on our Election Archive page, accessible below.


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Click to View Unofficial County Results

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Click to View Unofficial State Results

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Click for Mail/Absentee Ballot Return Data

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Click for Write-In Vote Counts to be made available after Election Day.




DELAWARE COUNTY BUREAU OF ELECTIONS HEADQUARTERS LIVESTREAM


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Camera's 1 - 3 from the Bureau's HQ

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Camera's 4 - 6 from the Bureau's HQ

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Camera's 7 - 10 from the Bureau's HQ




ELECTION RESULTS ARCHIVE

Previous Election Results from Delaware County (Archives since 2007)




ELECTION RESULTS OVERVIEW

The process of reviewing, opening, and counting mail-in and absentee ballots always begins on Election Day morning; it may not begin before that under the law.

Although mail-in and absentee ballots are opened and scanned during Election Day, the results of the scanned ballots may not be tallied until after the polls close at 8:00 p.m. on Election Day.

Once the polls close, the mail-in and absentee ballots may be tallied in real time as the scanners scan and count the votes on these ballots. Votes cast at the polling places on Election Day are captured on the memory cards in the polling place scanners (as well as on the paper ballots that are scanned into the polling place scanners). Once a critical mass of ballots/memory cards have been counted, the Board of Elections reports *unofficial* results here and will continue to update those results periodically as additional ballots and memory cards are counted.

As has always been the case, the Board does not have official results from the election for several days. This is because, even after all of the ballots cast on or before Election Day have been counted, a number of additional ballots will still need to be counted, including ballots returned by overseas and uniformed military voters, which may be counted so long as they are received by the statutory deadline, which is several days after Election Day, and provisional ballots cast on Election Day that are determined by the Board to be valid, which determination will not be made until several days after Election Day.



BALLOT SECURITY

The Board is following all requirements of the Pennsylvania Election Code regarding ballot security.

Mail-in and absentee ballots returned by mail to the Board of Elections will be date stamped and logged in by the Board upon receipt and placed under lock and key in a secure room in a building guarded by various layers of security and surveillance until they are ready to be opened and counted starting on Election Day.

Mail-in and absentee ballots returned to an official Board of Elections ballot drop box are collected daily by two person teams of Board staff and delivered to the Board where they are placed under lock and key in a secure room in a building guarded by various layers of security and surveillance until they are ready to be opened and counted starting on Election Day. A written paper trail reflecting the collection and delivery of the ballots collected each day from each drop box is created to ensure that all ballots can be accounted for and tracked.

Mail-in and absentee ballots returned to an official Board of Elections Voter Service Center are collected daily by Board staff and placed under lock and key in a secure room in a building guarded by various layers of security and surveillance until they are ready to be opened and counted starting on Election Day. A written paper trail reflecting the collection and delivery of the ballots collected each day at each Voter Service Center is created to ensure that all ballots can be accounted for and tracked.



ELECTION FRAUD

Many people have expressed concerns about potential election fraud, particularly regarding the new mail-in ballot voting option. Such concerns are not based in fact nor are they well-founded.

As noted above, mail-in ballots work the same way that absentee ballots work, and those have been used in Pennsylvania for decades without significant incidents.

Each mail-in and absentee ballot has a unique bar code. If someone were to try to copy a mail-in or absentee ballot and fill out multiple copies in an effort to vote multiple times, that would be revealed by the bar code. Only the first ballot scanned in with that bar code would be counted. The others would be rejected by the system. In addition, in order to vote multiple ballots the person would have to also have multiple security envelopes and return ballot envelopes. The return ballot envelopes also have unique bar codes that would prevent them from being copied.

A person is also not able to vote by mail and also in person as a way to vote twice. Each voter who has been sent a mail-in or absentee ballot is identified in the poll book that will be at their polling place on Election Day has having received a mail-in or absentee ballot. The poll book explicitly instructs the local election board workers that voter may only cast a provisional ballot. Provisional ballots are not reviewed until after all mail-in and absentee ballots are scanned in. Where someone has voted by mail-in or absentee ballot, if that person also voted a provisional ballot the system will not permit the person’s provisional ballot to be counted.



PROVISIONAL BALLOT REVIEW OBSERVERS

One authorized representative observer of each candidate in the election and one representative from each political party shall be permitted to be in the room in which the provisional ballots are reviewed; provided, however, that if the number of observers is such that there is not sufficient space to accommodate all observers at one time in the designated observers area while permitting social distancing, then the observers for the two major parties and for the two major Presidential Campaigns shall be permitted to remain in the room at all times, while the other observers shall be permitted to be in the room on a rotating basis as space and health guidelines permit.

Download the Provisional Ballot Review Observer Rules document for more information.

Any party or candidate seeking to have an observer at the provisional ballot review must email ElectionBoardMembers@co.delaware.pa.us with the name of each observer they would like to appoint, the observer’s address, and—if the observer is the attorney for a party or candidate—the PA Bar number of the observer. Due to security restrictions, observer requests must be received by the deadline in order to be approved prior to the start of the provisional ballot review process. Requests received after that deadline will be processed on a rolling basis any may not be processed prior to the start of the provisional ballot review.

Observers must be pre-approved in accordance with the process described above and pass a security and health screening in order to be admitted to the provisional ballot review. Each observer must sign the observer log in order to gain admission to the provisional ballot review.



Contact Us

  •   201 West Front Street,
         Media, PA 19063
  •   8:30AM - 4:30PM
           Monday - Friday
  •   610-891-4000
  • webmaster@co.delaware.pa.us

About Delaware County

Delaware County, presently consisting of over 184 square miles divided into forty-nine municipalities is the oldest settled section of Pennsylvania.


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