Minnesota Recount: An inside look at Team Franken tactics
posted at 3:45 pm on February 10, 2009 by Ed Morrissey
My friend Gary Gross has an exclusive from one of the Norm Coleman volunteers in the recount that he promises will make people very, very angry. I’m not so sure about that, but it does point up the recount panel’s failure to exercise consistent control over the question of wrongly-rejected absentee ballots, and how that resulted in mischief during the recount:
Towards the end of that category, I saw my fiancé Sara’s name on the list. I tried, at first, to examine the ballots leading up to hers with my best poker face in hopes that we’d examine her ballot as we’d examined the others in the category, and not discuss it based on who she was as an identifiable voter.
I had no such luck.
When we came to examine Sara’s ballot, the Franken attorney (who I had been working with for two days) recognized my name as a witness to her absentee ballot.
As I wrote above, we were looking at a category of ballots that the county and both campaigns agreed were wrongly rejected as a result of an error made by a county worker, not the voter.
I recall the smug look, and devious grin on the face of the Franken attorney as looked at my witness signature on the ballot envelope. I openly admitted then that the ballot was my fiancé’s, and that I had served as a witness for her so she could cast her ballot absentee. She was scheduled to be in California on business on Election Day.
Among the other reasons an absentee ballot can be rejected is when the signature on the request for the absentee ballot and the signature on the absentee ballot submission don’t match. For the obvious reason of protecting voters against having their ballot cast absentee by someone other than themselves, this reason for rejection makes sense and is something I fully support.
Knowing specifically that I (a Coleman attorney) was a witness to her ballot, and suspecting that her ballot was cast for Coleman, the Franken Attorney said he believed that the signatures on her absentee ballot did not match the signature on her absentee ballot request, and that it was his position (the position of the Franken campaign) that her ballot should not be included in the recount.
This happened in Dakota County, where I live, and which has elected conservative John Kline to four terms in the House. It doesn’t surprise me that Franken’s team would target ballots in this county as more potentially damaging to their chances. Why shouldn’t they? The Canvassing Board gave both campaigns carte blanche to run roughshod over the rights of voters by granting them veto power over the so-called “fifth pile” absentee ballots.
The decision to grant that veto power is what led the election contest panel to grant Coleman’s request to review almost 4800 more ballots last week. The Canvassing Board stood the electoral process on its ear, putting the campaigns in charge of enforcing the law rather than the state, in a move that essentially abandoned Minnesota voters to the whims of campaign muscle from both sides. It violated the Bush v Gore standard of the Equal Protection Clause, and even the remedy granted to Coleman last week might not solve that problem on appeal.
Gary is correct, though, that this episode makes Al Franken’s pledge to “count every vote” look highly hypocritical. The problem, though, is that Al Franken and Norm Coleman shouldn’t have had the power to determine that. Minnesotans expected that the state would protect the rights of voters, an expectation that the Canvassing Board and the Secretary of State failed to meet.









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Minnesota.
I would move but now there is nowhere to go.
Bishop on February 10, 2009 at 3:49 PM
This day started out pretty well with the Murtha story and the Minnick proposal. Since then it’s been nothing but heartache and nausea.
I’d almost welcome a View clip or some other distraction from everything going on.
Ferris on February 10, 2009 at 3:52 PM
Iraq did better then your state,
by the way that happened to that ballot does anger me.
rob verdi on February 10, 2009 at 3:54 PM
It should make people angry, but most are nothing more than apathetic ostriches….
ladyingray on February 10, 2009 at 3:56 PM
Standards? We don’t need no steenking standards.
rbj on February 10, 2009 at 3:57 PM
Might as well just give it to Frankenstein, the dems don’t need him to get what they want anyway.
Bishop on February 10, 2009 at 3:58 PM
let’s seat Coleman and replace SPECTOR with FRANKEN….not a lot of difference…..
SDarchitect on February 10, 2009 at 4:00 PM
I am really tired of the whining from this state…no way should this take this long.
right2bright on February 10, 2009 at 4:01 PM
Franken’s acted like — excuse my hyperbole but no other word fits here — like a nazi in this horrible campaign of his. If he and attorneys are quite so nasty now, what does anyone think will result if Franken is ever handed a public office?
There’s a great deal, a GREAT DEAL, of Liberal offense involved in pushing Franken into public office to such an extent that they’re presenting as a guerilla force. In all definitions of that phrase.
S on February 10, 2009 at 4:02 PM
Democrats have pretty much convinced themselves that hereafter, they must win every close election.
Democrat politicians are all completely corrupt.
Anyone thinking differently is delusional. The Democrat Party is a cancer on this nation.
NoDonkey on February 10, 2009 at 4:04 PM
Same crap happened here in King County in 2004.
I’ve come to the conclusion that most Democrats in political positions (note how careful I am to exclude the bluecollar Democrat) love power so much that they no longer care about what is right or not. Same goes for most intellectuals who are Democrats.
My cousin recently was telling me how in her history classes all the history teachers are always talking about how bad democracy is as a government because it lets uneducated voters cancel out the votes of educated voters. I had to point out to her that maybe history teachers have a bit of bias on that issue. (Seeing as they are “educated”).
It’s very simple, these people believe they have RIGHT to the government. The have a RIGHT to rule over us, and so anything that gives them that power is, and whatever denies it is bad. All the things they keep accusing Republicans of (like vote surpression) are things that they do themselves if they are in power. That’s why they are so quick to assume that Republicans have won through “dirty tricks”. They are completely paraniod, and use that as justification for their own “dirty tricks”. The left today sounds positively Nixonian.
Sackett on February 10, 2009 at 4:06 PM
If that’s the best we’ve got, calling Libs like Franken “hypocritical”, then, maybe, we deserve what we are getting.
there it is on February 10, 2009 at 4:07 PM
Ed, Thanks for linking to my post. Chris’s story is something that should get honest people everywhere upset.
I agree with you that the campaigns shouldn’t have had this veto power. That isn’t what’s written in Minnesota’s election laws. I know. I’ve scoured Minnesota’s election laws.
The criteria for rejecting or accepting absentee ballots are clearly written into Minnesota’s election laws. One of the clearly communicated sections of the law is that the job of accepting or rejecting absentee ballots is the responsibility of election officials.
In other words, it’s an administrative responsibility. After reading the laws, it’s clear that provision wasn’t made for partisan campaigns to have a role in this process.
I totally agree with everything Ed wrote in this post. It’s in agreement with what I’ve read in Minnesota’s election laws.
LFRGary on February 10, 2009 at 4:08 PM
I’m angry, sick, disgusted and feeling pretty hopeless. So many emotions in the span of 1 day.
becki51758 on February 10, 2009 at 4:18 PM
WHY didn’t the MN sec of state do anything??? It’s Mark Ritchie – big lib.
marklmail on February 10, 2009 at 4:35 PM
Beck, I strongly urge you to think of ways you can impact local elections. After the midterm disaster of ’06, I put a couple posts together the morning after the election. That was an important first step in getting plugged in & getting things turned around.
I got active with my local party. I also contacted a feisty woman legislator from a southern Twin Cities burb named Laura Brod. The first week of the 2007 session, Laura tried introducing tax cuts as amendments to a tax conformity law. The Democratic speaker ruled that her amendments weren’t germane to the legislation.
A month later, Rep. Brod was part of a group of state legislators that met with a group of St. Cloud conservative activists. That meeting produced a strategy which gave us a playbook to work from.
The biggest thing that came out of that meeting was our urging the legislators to keep offering amendments & legislation even though it wouldn’t get passed.
The logic was that we’d use these votes against the Democrats in this election. Unfortunately, our work was negated by the Obama effect.
Another thing I did was put together a small team of legislators & activists to work on a document that laid out what the House GOP stood for.
That document will be revised for the next midterm elections & it will include the Senate GOP. Still, we’re going to get into the DFL’s face by asking them why they aren’t friendly to policies that lead to prosperity.
LFRGary on February 10, 2009 at 4:43 PM
What is the possibility of just having a re-vote or a runoff between Coleman and Franken? And, if so, would Coleman or Franken be more likely to win?
I mean, at what point does this vote counting, recounting, challenging, canvassing, and now protest process become so transparently absurd that it just undermines the confidence of the public in the election to the point where you just have to throw the election out and re-do it?
Outlander on February 10, 2009 at 5:15 PM
Somebody once posted on Hot Air that the great state of Minnesota had the most honest election laws in the nation. Who was that?
Percy_Peabody on February 10, 2009 at 5:42 PM
Why can’t we blame both? Why does Stewey deserve a pass?
Cylor on February 11, 2009 at 3:39 AM
New Hampshire! Like Bishop first poster above, I would move too, but can’t.
jeanie on February 11, 2009 at 9:09 AM
Bishop – you are welcome here in Utah. Our economy here has not taken the hit that Minnesota’s has……
Percy – the laws are well written – the problem is that Mark Ritchie interjected partisanship into the laws. Ritchie needs to be impeached…..
LL
Lady Logician on February 11, 2009 at 9:59 AM