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Home Front: Politix
Glut of ballot challenges chokes recount
2008-12-05
Unless Minnesota's U.S. Senate campaigns aggressively withdraw some of the ballots they've challenged during the 3-week-old recount, it could take more than a month for a state board to judge them.

As of Wednesday, 6,326 ballots were taken off the piles of recounted votes after observers for Democrat Al Franken or Republican Sen. Norm Coleman questioned the voters' intent or the validity of the votes. A State Canvassing Board, made up of two county and two Supreme Court judges and the secretary of state, will determine how those ballots should be counted later this month.

The Franken campaign Wednesday made a move to reduce the size of that challenged stack. It told the secretary of state's office that the campaign wanted to withdraw 633 of its more than 3,000 ballot challenges.

All counties are expected to finish sifting through ballots by Friday. As of Wednesday night, when about 98 percent of ballots were counted, Coleman led Franken by 316 votes, when comparing the Election Day totals to the recounted totals. That vote lead doesn't include any of the challenged ballots.

After "painstaking" examination of some of the challenged ballots, folks at Franken headquarters decided voter intent was clear, and the 633 ballots were valid. The campaign likely will remove more ballots from those the canvassing board will have to plow through. "This is as far as we have gotten in this process," said Franken recount attorney Marc Elias.

Both campaigns have claimed since the recount started Nov. 19 that their opponents were challenging ballots in order to inflate the vote counts. Elias claimed Wednesday that if the challenges were counted as they eventually will be, Franken would actually be leading by 22 votes in the race.

Last week, Coleman recount attorney Fritz Knaak asked the Franken campaign for a détente in the "game of ballot challenge one-upmanship" but hasn't yet withdrawn any challenges levied by the Coleman campaign.
Posted by:Fred

#6  These all should be thrown out. If a voter makes a mistake or spoils the ballot, he or she goes back for more. Intent does not cut it. The directions are clear. Letting anything like this go is letting the whole camel into the tent. Where will it stop?

We have similar problems with bids at work. The instructions are clear. For example, no faxes. We get faxes. Bid is non responsive.

Franken is just trying to get into the tent. A typical dem. The ends justify the means. We are counting ballots, not interpreting ink slobber or chicken scratches. He is trying to harvest votes out of background noise.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2008-12-05 19:11  

#5  That was fun -- do the gradings mean anything?
Posted by: 3dc   2008-12-05 17:14  

#4  Has everybody seen some of these things? Now even the folks in Florida have people to point and laugh at...

http://minnesota.publicradio.org/features/2008/11/19_challenged_ballots/
Posted by: tu3031   2008-12-05 12:59  

#3  ....well at least Jesse did his time in the field and understood the follow on gig was really all about entertainment.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2008-12-05 12:38  

#2  And he differs from Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura in what respect?
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2008-12-05 11:20  

#1  I find it really hard to believe that more than a couple hundred people in the whole of Minnesota would want to vote for Al Franken to be their Senator. He's a clown, and a blowhard, and a world class nut.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-12-05 10:59  

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