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The Minnesota Supreme Court yesterday declared Democrat Al Franken
the winner of last year's disputed Senate race, and Republican
incumbent Norm Coleman's gracious concession at least spares the state
any further legal combat. The unfortunate lesson is that you don't need
to win the vote on Election Day as long as your lawyers are creative
enough to have enough new or disqualified ballots counted after the
fact.
Mr. Franken trailed Mr. Coleman by 725 votes after the initial count
on election night, and 215 after the first canvass. The Democrat's
strategy from the start was to manipulate the recount in a way that
would discover votes that could add to his total. The Franken legal
team swarmed the recount, aggressively demanding that votes that had
been disqualified be added to his count, while others be denied for Mr.
Coleman.
This is now the second time Republicans have been beaten in this
kind of legal street fight. In 2004, Dino Rossi was ahead in the
election-night count for Washington Governor against Democrat Christine
Gregoire. Ms. Gregoire's team demanded the right to rifle through a
list of provisional votes that hadn't been counted, setting off a hunt
for "new" Gregoire votes. By the third recount, she'd discovered enough
to win. This was the model for the Franken team.
Mr. Franken now goes to the Senate having effectively stolen an
election. If the GOP hopes to avoid repeats, it should learn from
Minnesota that modern elections don't end when voters cast their
ballots. They only end after the lawyers count them.
Wall Street Journal
"Certainly one of the chief guarantees of freedom under any government,
no matter how popular and respected, is the right of citizens to keep
and bear arms.... The right of citizens to bear arms is just one
guarantee against arbitrary government, one more safeguard against the
tyranny which now appears remote in America but which historically has
proven to be always possible." Hubert H. Humphrey, 1960 |
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