Minnesota took until 5 PM today to begin actually counting rejected
absentee ballots, as the Canvassing Board sorted through various legal
objections, underwent the arduous task of physically opening more than
900 ballots, and then gave the campaigns a chance to review the back
of the ballots for identifying marks. Once they finally got underway,
however, with election officials calling out the names of the
candidates one ballot at a time, Franken went on a long winning streak
and essentially never looked back.

All told, Franken gained a net of 176 ballots from the 952 under
review according to The Uptake's unofficial count, putting him 225
votes ahead in the recount overall. Excluding disqualified ballots,
Franken won 53.7 percent of the votes counted today, Coleman 34.1
percent, and other candidates 12.4 percent. Franken's 225-vote
advantage is now slightly larger than the one Norm Coleman held before
the recount began, when he led by 215 votes based on the certified
Election Night tally.

Although the absentee ballots were expected by all observers to help
Franken's prospects, the nearly 20-point margin that he ran up on
Coleman today was surprisingly large; two pre-election polls that
surveyed absentee voters had Franken winning that group by 8 points
and 12 points, respectively. (n.b. Originally missed the Research 2000
poll on this -- nrs). It should also be remembered, however, that the
Democrats made a large nationwide push for early and absentee voters
this year, with Barack Obama overperforming by as many as 20-30 points
among those voters in certain states.

The other possibility, of course, is that the Franken campaign did a
more effective job of using its veto power on absentee ballots,
perhaps by taking better advantage of voter lists.

Either way, a number of legal stratagems that might have seemed
appealing to the Coleman campaign might now be somewhat mooted. For
instance, even if all 130 ballots that the Coleman campaign claimed
were double-counted for Franken were removed from his tally (but no
ballots at all had been double-counted for Coleman), Franken would
maintain a significant advantage. With Franken doing so well among the
absentee ballots that were counted today, moreover, any Coleman
attempts to get more absentee ballots counted would seem to have a
high risk of backfiring.

EDIT: It appears that Franken's lead is now 225 votes, not 223 as
previously reported, based on an a count provided orally by state
officials in St. Paul today.

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