Minnesota's U.S. Senate showdown is veering down a path toward the courts and possibly the Senate itself after a panel's ruling on rejected absentee ballots dealt a blow to Democrat Al Franken's chances.
For the first time, his campaign on Wednesday openly discussed mounting challenges after the hand recount involving Franken and Republican Sen. Norm Coleman concludes. That includes the possibility of drawing the Senate into the fracas.
The state Canvassing Board denied Franken's request to factor absentee ballots rejected by poll workers into the recount. He sought to overturn the exclusions in cases where ballots were invalidated over signature problems or other voter errors. Coleman's campaign maintained the board lacked power to revisit those ballots.
Franken entered the recount trailing Coleman by 215 votes out of 2.9 million ballots. As of Wednesday night, Coleman was up 292 votes, including results from Nov. 4 and recounted ones. All told, 86 percent of the ballots have been recounted. However, about 4,740 ballots have been challenged by the two campaigns that could fall to the canvassing board to rule on.
The ruling wasn't a complete victory for Coleman. The board left open the possibility of examining ballots that were set aside for errors outside of the voter's control.
Secretary of State Mark Ritchie estimated that 12,000 absentee ballots were rejected for various reasons - some legitimate, some not. That represents between 4 percent and 5 percent of all the absentee ballots cast. Franken's campaign had made the push to factor in rejected absentee ballots key to its recount strategy, even going to court to force county officials to turn over data on voters whose ballots didn't count.
Marc Elias, the legal chief for Franken, said the campaign won't appeal the board's ruling but it could seek intervention of another kind once the recount wraps up. "Whether it is at the county level, before the Canvassing Board, before the courts or before the United States Senate, we don't know yet. But we remain confident these votes will be counted," Elias said.
Posted by: Fred ||
11/28/2008 09:09 ||
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#1
Maybe he can go back to SNL as self-help guru Stuart Smalley (Carpetbagger). Ah, the lure of easy money, job security, a steady paycheck, health insurance and other perks as a Senator.
#3
'Tis the season to be jolly. Salute a comedians efforts to get a real job. Lift your cup in a toast... No, wait a minute. Make that a stein, yes, a stein - a Franken Stein! I predict that, if necessary, he wil take his fight to the Senate. Then as I understand it, the Senate can decide who it will or will not seat. Scary thoughts for the new year.
Posted by: Richard of Oregon ||
11/28/2008 11:15 Comments ||
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#4
How is this for an option, Franken.
Go drown yourself in booze and coke and make a further laughing stock of yourself.
#5
The scary thing is all the idiotic lemmings who voted for this twit...kind of like our pres elect.
Posted by: Clererong Oppressor of the Algonquins aka Broadhead6 ||
11/28/2008 12:31 Comments ||
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#6
Him winning the seat will be of really of no value to our troubled nation. To think Minnesota voters could even concider this dumb@$$ as a candidate is telling of the state or reality up there. Franklin's an idiot and Minnesota should not be allowed representation until they grow up.
Posted by: 49 Pan ||
11/28/2008 12:33 Comments ||
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#7
Richard, Franken is a comedian? He's funny? Who knew?
#12
If this is what the superior Midwest edumacayshunul system produces (MN voters, Ohio vote fraud, and yeah, gonna toss in Murtha's district), I gotta get back down south of the snow line before the Tsarevich hits kindergarten.
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