2008 Election Still Open to Repug Theft
When Talking Points Memo, which broke the US Attorneys scandal, says a story is flying under the national and MSM radar, bloggers should need no further encouragement.
Did you know that the mere fact a republican incumbent lost a tight re-election is proof that the election was rigged and needs to be done over?
No? Then meet former Minnesota Senator Norm Coleman, the biggest sore-losing WATB north of Rush Limpballs.
In a nutshell, Norm Coleman has lost but refuses to concede and now wants to throw out the original election, the one he lost, and hold a new one.
Coleman was ahead after the initial tally on election night, but then found himself 225 votes behind Al Franken after the state-mandated recount. So Coleman sued to have the results of the election overturned by a court, primarily (though not exclusively) on the grounds that certain absentee ballots were counted that shouldn't have been and others weren't counted but should have been. That's most of what the twists and turns of the legal dispute have been about (a political junkies dream, really).
But five weeks into the election contest trial, the court has repeatedly issued rulings that narrow Coleman's chances of either collecting enough newly counted ballots or throwing out already counted ballots -- or some combination of the two. So in recent days, the Coleman legal team has become increasingly shrill in its attacks not just on the court but on the entire electoral process in Minnesota, getting closer every day to outright calling for the Nov. 4 election be declared null and void and a whole new election be held between Coleman and Franken. And now Coleman himself has suggested that a do-over election may be necessary.
In the background of course is the fact that the longer the legal dispute drags on, the longer Senate Democrats are denied an important 59th vote, in the person of Al Franken. But let's not allow that to distract from the fact that Coleman (and the GOP) still desperately wants to win, and has shown himself willing to do just about anything to get there.
Throwing your hands up and saying let's just call the election a tie and do it again is the desperate last act of a losing candidate. That this ploy requires attacking the entire electoral process and the people who conduct elections in the state is just a sign of his desperation. But apparently even the Coleman camp is starting to see that a do-over election is the only avenue still open to Coleman that might, albeit remotely, allow him to return to his seat.
For years, and certainly most loudly since the Florida debacle of 2000, Republicans have made ill-founded election hijinks charges against Democrats. But Norm Coleman, with the support of national Republicans (keep in mind that one of Coleman's lawyers is Ben Ginsberg, the Bush campaign's top lawyer in 2000) is now poised to try to pull off what would be perhaps a bigger election robbery than Bush v. Gore: toss out the nearly three million votes cast on one of the most-anticipated election days in this nation's history in favor of a much smaller special do-over election. It's breath-taking. Yet for some reason this story still seems to be flying below the national political radar.
Read the the whole reality-defying fiasco.
3 comments:
Norm Coleman typifies today's Republican: Self-centered, egotistic, and completely beholden to big money, big business, and special interests. As a Minnesotan, I know all about this guy. He is out for Norm Coleman and ONLY Norm Coleman. To hell with the needs of the people of Minnesota---Norm comes first. To hell with fellow Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar and the unfair burden he's putting on her---Norm comes first. He, his pal GOP Governor Tim Pawlenty (UGH---ANOTHER Bush clone) and his crooked conservative Republican attorneys are going to try their best to steal or overturn this close election, but they're going to fail. Al Franken WILL become Minnesota's next Senator, and justifiably so!
You're a Minnesotan? Then get up there and fix it!
Seriously, I can't decide whether it's ironic or appropriate that this election mess is taking place in the epitome of good government. If Minnesota can't get elections right, nobody can.
Although it really is not an election mess - it's just Coleman taking advantage of good election law (no certification until appeals are complete, etc.)
It's a shame what Coleman's doing to the people of Minnesota, but the courts seem to be handling it exactly right - working the Rule of Law, but slapping Norm down at every opportunity.
I hope they teach the lessons of this case to election officials everywhere.
Yes, it's all in the hands of the court now, so there's little voters can do but publicly express their opinion to raise hell about Coleman's nonsense. And, as you say, the courts are doing it correctly, just as the Minnesota electoral system had. COLEMAN'S the one screwing everything up---typical selfish, obstructionist Republican! GRRRR!!!!
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