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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
15.12.2008
Minnesota Senate Recount Update


If you haven't been paying attention to the Minnesota Senate race, it now looks very likely that Al Franken is going to win. News reports have indicated that Norm Coleman holds a lead of about 200 votes (192 is the most recent). But that number isn't very indicative of where things stand. As local canvassing boards have recounted their ballots, either campaign has been able to challenge any ballot they want, for any reason. And the official total does not include any challenged ballots. This rule gave both campaigns a strong incentive to challenge ballots: The more ballots you challenge (that show your opponent gaining a vote, obviously), the bigger your lead would seem to be.

The Franken campaign has been circulating its own number, which assumes that the initial judgment of the canvassing board is correct. According to this figure, Franken is leading Coleman by four votes. Press coverage has often failed to explain the methodology of Franken's number -- which, if accurately reported, would provide a much more clear window into the true state of the race. Of course, this assumed that Franken's campaign was reporting the number accurately. (The Coleman campaign disputed it, but suspiciously refused to provide its own number.) Now, finally, the Associated Press has examined the challenged ballots, and concluded:

The AP also found that of the 3,500 challenged ballots that easily could be assigned, Franken netted 200 more votes than Coleman.

In other words, the Franken number is basically dead on: start with Coleman ahead by 192 votes, net 200 for Franken, and you've got Franken with a small single-digit (!) lead.

Of course, that's pretty precarious. But the other wild card is absentee ballots, hundreds of which seem to have been erronesouly disqualified, and which seem to favor Franken. All in all, Franken seems like a pretty strong bet to win.

--Jonathan Chait

Posted: Monday, December 15, 2008 12:40 PM with 11 comment(s)

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davidlheber said:

Al Franken truely symbolizes the people of Minnesota.

December 15, 2008 1:28 PM

dylanposer said:

Tomorrow's Rove spin in the WSJ: A single-digit win in state that pulled for Obama by more than 10 percent proves that the country really is still, and shall remain, center-right; this is a conservative mandate.

December 15, 2008 1:40 PM

rozenson said:

This will make Franken the fourth consecutive Jew to hold that seat, following Coleman, Paul Wellstone, and Rudy Boschwitz.

December 15, 2008 1:43 PM

mcorey.geo said:

Man, that is some thin gruel. Look, I'm a liberal Democrat and want Franken to win. But at EVERY POINT in this count, including now (private numbers notwithstanding) Coleman has been in the lead. Call me when an impartial observer says otherwise.

December 15, 2008 1:56 PM

selish70 said:

That lead has been pretty steadily ground down, huh?  That's just wild and wacky stuff right there.

December 15, 2008 2:10 PM

ironyroad said:

Although a clean win is healthy, sometimes I like to see politicians sweating over every last vote.  When I say that that's what democracy is about, I'm not being funny.

December 15, 2008 2:42 PM

Early Returns said:

Timothy McNulty | December 15, 2008 We've been ignoring the Norm Coleman/Al Franken recount mess

December 15, 2008 2:53 PM

CRS9TNR said:

You mean to tell me after a month of reporting Coleman ahead by 200 votes that Minnesota is going to declare Franken the winner?

There will be a Minnesota Riot if the announcement comes out of the blue like this.

They's be throwing Tooks and Pasties and the streets of St. Paul and Minneapolis will be packed with protestors as soon as the snow melts.  Stern looks from the Scandanavians.

December 15, 2008 6:53 PM

iambiguous said:

If it turns out that Al Franken was the guy who threw the shoes at Bush, Coleman is all but sunk. Only if he throws his own shoes at Dick Cheney, will there be a sliver of hope he can pull it off. But even then at least one of the shoes must not miss.

george walton

December 16, 2008 2:34 AM

waynejm said:

I hope Franken wins, not just for political reasons.  Just visualize all those heads exploding on Fox.

December 16, 2008 5:18 PM

mjhollerich said:

Almost forgotten in the more farcical moments of the Minnesota senatorial recount is the unhappy fact that this election was the DFL's to lose:  Bush is wildly unpopular in Minnesota, and Coleman could never free himself from the tar baby.  Plus, Coleman is widely regarded as something of a weasel.  But the DFL has a history of nominating less than compelling candidates.  Franken did break the mold of choosing party stalwarts who were being rewarded for meritorious lifetime service, or undistinguished big donors (Mark Dayton).  He is also a native, part of our Jewish Minnesota emigration to the coastal perimeters (same west Mpls suburban neighborhood as the Coen Bros, I think).  But the comic shtick didn't go over so well here.  He got tough competition for the nomination from a local faculty radical named Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer whose views were somewhere near those of Daniel Ortega in his earlier Sandinista incarnation.  The third party candidate, with virtually no advertising budget, consistently polled in the mid-teens, which represented a huge protest vote against both big party candidates.  

I guess I'll be happy to have another Democrat in the Senate.  But I'd be happier if he were someone of the promising timbre of Amy Klobuchar.  

December 17, 2008 5:47 AM