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Search for Missing Minnesota Senate Ballots Stopped

by:   |  The Associated Press

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A search for 130 missing ballots in Minnesota has been stopped. The missing votes are believed to favor Al Franken. (Photo: Dawn Villella / AP)

    St. Paul, Minnesota - The city of Minneapolis has stopped searching for about 130 ballots in the U.S. Senate recount, leaving state officials to choose between two sets of tallies in the tight race between Sen. Norm Coleman and Al Franken.

    City officials believed ballots were missing after the number of votes recounted in one precinct ended up 133 less than the number tallied on Election Day. The missing votes favored Franken, who would fall another 46 votes behind Coleman if the precinct's recount numbers are used instead of the initial tally.

    City spokesman Matt Laible said workers looked all day Friday at the city's election warehouse without success, then regrouped over the weekend and decided to turn over two sets of numbers to the Secretary of State's office: the Election Day tally, and the recounted results.

    It will be up to the state Canvassing Board to decide which count to use. The board meets Friday and could discuss the issue then.

    Franken's campaign expressed hope the board will use the Election Day count, while Coleman's campaign has questioned whether the discrepancy was actually the result of missing ballots.

    Coleman, a Republican, led his Democratic challenger by just 215 votes after the initial count of 2.9 million ballots. Outside of the precinct with the missing votes, the recount erased only a small portion of that advantage.

    The outcome could rest on thousands of ballots that the two campaigns have challenged and that the Canvassing Board will begin reviewing Dec. 16.

    Franken's campaign challenged almost 3,300 ballots, but last week he withdrew more than 630 of them and on Monday he pulled back another 425. Coleman's campaign made a similar number of challenges and withdrew 650 of them last week, and a spokesman said more would be withdrawn Tuesday.

  

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There should be a whole new

There should be a whole new election in MN on paper ballots only. Then you would see Coleman lose by ten thousand votes.

What a joke this is. I also

What a joke this is. I also feel there should be a new election.

I agree with "David

I agree with "David Failure." Should a new election be called in Minnesota, without all the tangential elections surrounding the ovals to be filled in by voters, Franken would win resoundingly.

I am a citizen and

I am a citizen and registered voter in the United States of America. Although I vote neither in Illinois nor Minnesota, still I will feel cheated if elections are not called in those states to settle the Senate seatings in the next Congress. We are all members of the Nation as a whole and it's time to get honest in our dealings everywhere. Judging how my computer acts sometimes, I would trust paper ballots only.

Over at FiveThirtyEight.com

Over at FiveThirtyEight.com there's a nice explanation of why the "explanation" for the missing ballots cannot be correct (Coleman's campaign, and some city officials, have claimed that these ballots were initially counted twice, and that's why nothing's actually "missing"). It's probably a ways down the front page by now, but it's an excellent point! I hope the Franken campaign has found it.

In France there is the

In France there is the 'second turn' in presidential elections. It occurs when the two leading candidates have a less than overwhelming majority due to the fact that there are many partys with candidates. It is never so low a difference as in this Senate race YET THE WHILE NATION VOTES AGAIN. This gives everyone the chance to vote for the person they REALLY prefer. Hey France is much bigger than Minnesota!