The Minnesota Senate race is not over, not officially. The race won’t be certified until Monday, and election challenges loom after that. But for all intents and purposes, Al Franken locked up victory today, extending his lead to 225 votes.
This leaves Norm Coleman in a very bad spot. Coleman has claimed through his attorneys that there are 130 more votes for him (or more accurately, 130 fewer for Franken) if “duplicate ballots” are thrown out. And Coleman also has been upset by 46 votes Franken gained from a Minneapolis precinct in which 133 ballots were lost, and in which the initial machine count was used instead of the hand recount.
But 130+46=176. And that leaves Franken a winner by 49 votes. Coleman would need to find more votes somewhere, which is why he’s currently suing to try to get an additional 634 absentee ballots counted — but those are ballots that do not appear to have been improperly rejected, which county officials say were properly rejected. It’s hard to imagine that changing at this late date.
In short, Coleman can sue, and likely will. But it’s hard to see any way in which the numbers work for him. At this point, Coleman is delaying the inevitable. That’s his right, but that doesn’t make it smart politically. If Coleman wants to, say, run for governor in 2010, he’s better off conceding graciously and rebuilding.
Yippee! I loved Stuart Smiley back in the day! This picture cracks me up!
Of course, now no progressive in Minnesota can say “stolen election of 2000” ever again, particularly if Coleman sues and loses.