![Gene J. Puskar FILE - An Allegheny County Election worker demonstrates a machine used to count mail-in ballots at the Elections warehouse in Pittsburgh, April 18, 2024. Pennsylvania is seeing lots of action targeting gaps in its vote-by-mails laws. The problem is that it's in the courtroom and not the Legislature. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)](https://mapi.associatedpress.com/v2/items/5bf0dc877a3a41f6b983b7a2418c80cb/preview/preview.jpg?s=680x)
FILE - An Allegheny County Election worker demonstrates a machine used to count mail-in ballots at the Elections warehouse in Pittsburgh, April 18, 2024. Pennsylvania is seeing lots of action targeting gaps in its vote-by-mails laws. The problem is that it's in the courtroom and not the Legislature. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)
![Gene J. Puskar FILE - Allegheny County election division manager David Voye demonstrates a voting machine used to process paper ballots at polling places at the elections warehouse in Pittsburgh, April 18, 2024. Pennsylvania is seeing lots of action targeting gaps in its vote-by-mails laws. The problem is that it's in the courtroom and not the Legislature. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)](https://mapi.associatedpress.com/v2/items/b87b4a4a63184f54a228b3d7ada25f63/preview/preview.jpg?s=680x)
FILE - Allegheny County election division manager David Voye demonstrates a voting machine used to process paper ballots at polling places at the elections warehouse in Pittsburgh, April 18, 2024. Pennsylvania is seeing lots of action targeting gaps in its vote-by-mails laws. The problem is that it's in the courtroom and not the Legislature. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)