In Bucks County, the Trump campaign lawsuit said people who were in line by Tuesday's 5 p.m. deadline to apply in-person for a mail ballot should have been allowed to get a ballot, even after the deadline. However, Bucks County's election office denied voters that right and ordered them to leave, the lawsuit said.
"This is a direct violation of Pennsylvanians' rights to cast their ballot — and all voters have a right to STAY in line," the Trump campaign said in a statement.
The Republican National Committee and the campaign of Republican Senate nominee David McCormick joined the lawsuit against Bucks County, where Democrats control the government in a closely politically divided county often seen as a political bellwether.
Gov. Josh Shapiro's administration had urged counties to allow every voter who was in line by the 5 p.m. deadline to submit a mail-in ballot application. Responding to criticism and misinformation on social media Tuesday, Bucks County had said every voter in line by 5 p.m. Tuesday would be allowed to apply for a mail ballot.
Bucks County officials did not immediately comment Wednesday.
Pennsylvania does not allow early voting on voting machines in polling places, as some states do.
But Bucks County, like other counties in Pennsylvania, allows voters to apply for a mail-in ballot in-person at the elections office and receive it there, a time-consuming process strained to the limit by Trump's exhortations to his supporters to get out and vote before Tuesday's deadline. Voters can also fill it out and hand it in at the office.
Voters waited up to three hours on Tuesday. Those still in line at 5 p.m. were told to go home, the lawsuit said.
In neighboring Lehigh County, a steady stream of voters took advantage of the one-day extension Wednesday, descending to the basement office of the voter registration office in Allentown to apply for a mail-in ballot, fill it out and turn it in. County elections workers explained the process as voters stepped off the elevator into a crowded hallway.
"There are wonderful reps here who are telling everybody what to do, how to do it. It's moving smoothly. I'm excited to be here," Jeanne Birosik, a Republican voter, said as she waited for elections workers to prepare her mail ballot.
Birosik typically votes on Election Day, but in 2020, she said, she showed up to her polling place and was incorrectly told she'd already voted. She filled out a provisional ballot that time, but didn't want to leave anything to chance for this election.
"This just seemed like a safer way to go about it," she said.
Her husband, Chris Birosik, 62, who was also there to vote, said they didn't consider dropping their ballots in the mail weeks ago — too risky, in his view.
"I just feel more confident that we get it in and do it this way," he said.
The early voting angst in Bucks County is the latest dustup over voting in Pennsylvania, which has the largest trove of electoral votes of any battleground state and is by far the state most visited by the Democratic and Republican presidential tickets this year. The runup to Election Day in the state has been marked by numerous battles over mail ballots, some landing on the doorstep of the U.S. Supreme Court.