LEBANON COUNTY — When a few voters at surveying areas in a Pennsylvania province saw their tallies Tuesday in the wake of picking Republican chosen one Donald Trump, they saw something unusual: it was going to count a vote in favor of Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.
In different cases, voters who endeavored to vote a straight-party Republican ticket saw the machine hosted transformed it to a Democratic Get-together ticket.
Decisions authorities in Lebanon County faulted the straight-party ticketing issue for an issue with the adjustment of five or six electronic voting machines. The other issue, they said, could be the consequence of oil on a screen could bring about a voter's fingers to slip.
Megan Sweeney, correspondences executive for the Republican Party of Pennsylvania, said the gathering's legitimate group would investigate it. "It's profoundly concerning," she said.
Pennsylvania could assume a key part in the result of the presidential race, and Clinton drove here in late surveys. Trump has cautioned of extortion in Philadelphia and has said the main way he could lose Pennsylvania is if deceiving is included.
Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams said a race misrepresentation team would have more than 70 right hand lead prosecutors and a few analysts accessible to address any Election Day concerns. The Philadelphia Republican Party wanted to have more survey watchers and minority monitors than it did in 2012, as per a gathering representative. What's more, Philadelphia is one of 67 locales in 28 states where the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Division of Justice said it will have individuals on the ground to screen the decision.


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