June 18, 2009 6:20 PM

Minn. Recount Nears End; Up Next: Lawsuits

(AP)  This week, Minnesota's Canvassing Board will declare what everyone's been waiting for in the state's prolonged U.S. Senate race: A winner.

Well, sort of.

Once it rewards a last batch of votes from improperly rejected absentee ballots, the Canvassing Board is expected to declare either Democrat Al Franken or Republican Norm Coleman as winner of the recount. But Minnesota law lets the losing candidate file an "election contest" that would throw the whole race into the courts, effectively blocking final certification of a new senator.

"I'd say it's close to inevitable" that the losing candidate will sue, said Edward Foley, an election law expert at Ohio State University who has closely monitored the Minnesota recount.

After the Canvassing Board names a winner, the losing candidate has seven days to file a lawsuit. If he does, the certification of a winner remains conditional until the court challenge is settled.

Lawyers for both campaigns have laid the groundwork for lawsuits through public comments and legal maneuvering. In recent weeks, as Franken clung to a small lead, Coleman's lawyers promised a lawsuit over their claim that some ballots duplicated on election night wound up being counted twice in the recount.

Franken stands to lose as many as 110 net votes if the court were to take Coleman's side on the duplicate ballot issue. Coleman's lawyers could also make an issue of the loss of 133 ballots in Minneapolis, which the Canvassing Board resolved by using the election night count for that precinct. If Coleman were to prevail on that, Franken would lose 46 votes.

The standards for accepting or rejecting absentee ballots are fodder for either candidate in a lawsuit. Foley predicted that a lawsuit could also make use of issues that so far have received little or no attention.

"I suspect there are other things that lawyers for both campaigns have flagged internally, that they haven't necessarily brought to public attention yet," Foley said.

Any lawsuit would go to a three-judge panel to be appointed by state Supreme Court Chief Justice Eric Magnuson. What's not clear is whether Magnuson would make the appointments himself, or delegate the decision since he served on the Canvassing Board.

When the 1962 Minnesota governor's race went to a recount and then a lawsuit, the chief justice at the time ordered the two campaigns to mutually agree on the makeup of the three-judge panel.

State law requires that a trial start within 20 days of a lawsuit being filed. The burden of proof would fall on the candidate who filed the challenge, who would have to provide evidence that the Canvassing Board declared the wrong guy the winner of the recount.

Lawyers for the other candidate would be given time at the trial to refute claims brought by their adversaries.

It's difficult to predict what twists and turns the trial could bring. "Everything really kind of goes back to zero," said Brian Rice, a Minneapolis attorney who's worked on more than a dozen recounts in local Minnesota races.

"What if one of the parties says we want to recount everything, every single vote, again?" Rice asked. "That has happened, and it's provided for in law."

State law sets short deadlines for the trial of an election lawsuit, and Rice said the ones he's worked on have always proceeded quickly. But the 1962 recount gives a hint that it won't happen too quickly: In that case, the three-judge panel didn't declare a winner until March 21, 1963.

Even that wouldn't necessarily end the process. The loser of a lawsuit could appeal to the state Supreme Court, and legal concepts such as equal protection already raised by both campaigns could provide footing for appeals to U.S. circuit courts and even the U.S. Supreme Court.

In the meantime, questions remain over whether the Canvassing Board's declared winner could be provisionally seated in the Senate or if Minnesota will go for a time without a second U.S. senator.

Joe Peschek, a political science professor at Hamline University, predicted that the longer the race remains unsettled, the more public pressure would go on the candidate that's perceived to be pushing back a final resolution to the race.

"Does it look like they're pursuing a serious case? Or does it look like sour grapes and cherry-picking of issues?" Peschek asked. "But these two candidates have proved they're competitive people, and as long as there's some small hope, we probably shouldn't expect that they'll give it up."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 94 Comments
by misha128-2009 January 5, 2009 12:22 PM EST
Looks like the democrats have successfully stolen another election!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Posted by keystonebull at 10:58 AM : Jan 04, 2009

Please explain how stolen as the votes were counted in public and on camera in many cases. The Republicans were well represented on the canvassing board and very very few votes of the canvassing board were even close. The last reported count had Franken in the lead by just short of 250 votes after mutually acceptable absentee ballots wrongfully excluded was counted. This election and this count more than any other I have seen in recent times including the court involvement in public proceedings when issues arose is a model for transparency. How much more transparent can the process be?
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by ioweign January 4, 2009 9:50 PM EST
Looks like the democrats have successfully stolen another election!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Posted by keystonebull at 10:58 AM : Jan 04, 2009


More Whining....
Reply to this comment
by vincan-2009 January 4, 2009 4:56 PM EST
Republicans are the ones who steal elections. It is republicans who cheat, lie, and suppress votes and voters. Having Al Franken win shows that the process works. It shows that the state is ready to throw out Coleman for his constant kissing of Bush''s policies that have brought great harm to America.
Reply to this comment
by irmcvet971 January 4, 2009 1:07 PM EST
yesbama1, No I mean the way this idiot Franken will behave, We have serious prroblems we do need a so called comedian, a bad one at that, in the Senate!

Posted by stlouisman3 at 07:45 PM : Jan 03, 2009

We need EVERY democratic vote we can get to prevent the Southern Fascist from stopping ANY meaningful change... the CHANGE the American People so overwhelmingly voted for. I hardly think we need another Fascist Republican hold over from the failures of Bush and what we now see. NOPE thanks but NO thanks!! No more "Free Trade" Agreements or Bridges to nowhere. We need to INVEST in AMERICA for a change and to helll with Multi National''s and their Party!! Sieg Heil Y''all
Reply to this comment
by smirk22-2009 January 4, 2009 9:57 AM EST
It''s time for Coleman to walk the walk he talked on Nov. 5. It''s time for him to "step back" to aid in the "healing process". Isn''t that what he said he "would do" if in the same position as Franken? Well, right now he is in that same position.

If you ask me what I would do, I would step back. I just think the need for the healing process is so important. The possibility of any change of this magnitude in the voting system we have is so remote, but that would be my judgment.
Norm Coleman Nov. 5, 2008
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZppOhCSRyFw
Reply to this comment
by sparks224 January 4, 2009 5:40 AM EST
This isn''t Florida.
The US Supreme court won''t touch this, they''re still embarrassed about Bush V. gore.
I'' afraid the Repugnants are out of luck this time.
Reply to this comment
by tangouniforn January 4, 2009 3:32 AM EST
Science would not happen if it was not for business driving it.

Posted by roystoll2

Business drives science? Science is. Peiod. Science existed before **** sapiens. It is being revealed slowly, generally by individuals working alone. It is being held prisoner by entities that do not like its implications.
Reply to this comment
by actornaught January 4, 2009 3:04 AM EST
Posted by gscotth at 11:59 PM : Jan 03, 2009

Sounds like you have all the answers. Better get to Minnesota.
Reply to this comment
by Stratmaster7 January 4, 2009 1:37 AM EST
Stlouisman you appear to have some deap seated hatred for Franken. Did you ever live in Minnesota? Ever been there? Something is up with that.

When did the profession of comedian become a reason to disqualify a senator? I mean, we have a (bad) actor Governor who can barely speak English, had a wrestler governor, have a few former jocks in congress.

At least Franken has been a political satirist for his entire adult life; meaning he at least has FOLLOWED THE ISSUES.
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by tucson23 January 3, 2009 11:08 PM EST
peace4321, exactly which European countries have completely broken down from socialism? Do you perhaps mean Britian, where London has surpassed NYC as the financial capital of the world? Do you not realize that we ourselves have had a healthy dose of socialism in this country for a century, and that century saw the greatest economic expansion in world history? Perhaps you should refuse Social Security in your retirement, work for less than minimum wage, and forget everything you learned in a public school--for a start. Do you drive on public roads? You''re a d*a*m*n socialist and don''t even realize it.
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