> gg wrote:
>> RoMunn wrote:
>> air. One can reasonably assume that found ballots would hold some votes for
>> Coleman and some votes for Franken.
>>
>
> ::sigh::  I'm trying not to say something like:

I should moderate my message given it is a confusing process and even
many people that live here don't get it.  Here is a decent summary:
--
The process by which the Senate race has come to this stage is often
confusing. Coleman held an approximately 200-vote lead after the state
went through a hand recount of all ballots. However, there remained
approximately 1,500 ballots that one or the other campaign contested
(and temporarily removed from the overall vote tally). Coleman
challenged about 1,000 of these, Franken the rest.

On Tuesday and Wednesday, the canvassing board considered Franken's
challenges, which gave a slight gain to Coleman's lead (Franken, after
all, was challenging ballots that were, perhaps erroneously, awarded
to Coleman during the recount). But the Franken campaign also gained
some votes during the two days; the canvassing board awarded him
dozens of ballots that had been wrongfully determined to be non-votes
or under-votes.

By Thursday, the canvassing board had moved onto the pile of Coleman
challenges, and with it, Coleman's lead quickly dissipated. It became
clear early on that the Senator had challenged many ballots simply
because they favored Franken and had a minor (non-disqualifying)
clerical error. The board began plowing through the votes until, by
late afternoon, Franken found himself down by only five.

As it stands now, it seems likely that Franken will end this process
with a lead wider than even his campaign expected. Earlier
projections, from the Associated Press, Star Tribune and Franken
himself, suggested that Coleman would lose the race by roughly 20
votes or less. And this tally doesn't even take into consideration the
legal and political battle being waged over wrongfully rejected
absentee ballots, which the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled, on
Thursday, should be counted.

That decision, another loss for the Coleman campaign, could mean even
more votes flowing into Franken's tally, though the Court also
stressed that the state and both campaigns come up with a uniform
standard for identifying these absentee ballots before they are
counted.

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