from
president Joe Biden in January 2023 Schmidt moved to
Philadelphia in 2005, and served as executive director of the Philadelphia Republican City Committee before stepping down in 2009 for an unsuccessful run for City
controller against
Democratic incumbent
Alan Butkovitz. He was re-elected in 2015 and 2019. Schmidt refused to cooperate with the
attempts to overturn the 2020 United States presidential election by publicly refuting claims of voter fraud and resisting calls from within his own party to stop counting mail-in ballots. He called some of president
Donald Trump's claims "fantastical" and "completely ridiculous allegations that have no basis in fact at all." On November 11, 2020, Trump directly attacked Schmidt on Twitter by claiming he "refuses to look at a mountain of corruption & dishonesty" in Philadelphia. After Trump's tweet, Schmidt testified that "my wife and I received threats that named our children, included my home address and images of my home, and threated [
sic] to put their 'heads on spikes.'" In late November 2021, Schmidt announced he would resign as a City Commissioner to become president and CEO of the Committee of Seventy, a nonpartisan, pro-democracy Philadelphia-based nonprofit group. On June 13, 2022, Schmidt testified before the
January 6 Committee, detailing the threats against him and his family as well as addressing claims of voter fraud in Philadelphia during the 2020 election.
Secretary of the Commonwealth On January 5, 2023, Schmidt was named by governor-elect
Josh Shapiro as the
secretary-designate of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The following day, on January 6, 2023, Schmidt was awarded the
Presidential Citizens Medal by president
Joe Biden for demonstrating "courage and selflessness" in opposing efforts to overturn the 2020 election as a city commissioner. Schmidt automatically became full Secretary on June 29 after the
Pennsylvania State Senate failed to act within the constitutionally prescribed 25-legislative-day period to confirm his nomination. In January 2024, Schmidt ordered a court-appointed
special master to demand $711,000 in legal reimbursements from the government of
Fulton County stemming from a case where Fulton County's Republican commissioners improperly allowed a Trump-affiliated lawyer access to the county's voting machines in order to aid the attempted reversal of Trump's defeat in Pennsylvania. In February 2024, Shapiro tapped Schmidt to head Pennsylvania's Election Threats Task Force. Ahead of the
2024 elections, the newly created task force operated as a collaborative effort between both federal and state law enforcement and administration officials working to combat election misinformation and threats against election workers. ==References==