You can read about the entire scandal here.Nov.4, Coleman Leads by 725 Votes – Unofficial tallies of election results statewide show Coleman the winner by 725 votes out of nearly 3 million votes cast. The narrow margin automatically triggers a recount.
Nov. 5, Coleman Leads by 475 Votes -- Ritchie’s office releases a news release stating, “In Minnesota’s U.S. Senate race, a slim margin of 475 votes favors Republican candidate and Republican senator Norn Coleman over Democratic challenger Al Franken.” The 250-vote difference? It stems from adjusted figures submitted by state and county officials around the state.
Nov.6, Coleman Leads by 438 Votes – Coleman’s margin continues to diminish as more adjusted figures come in. Why the adjustments consistently favor Franken goes largely unexplained. “What struck me as really outrageous was, in the beginning, how Coleman’s lead shrank,” comments Matthew Vadum, senior editor for Capital Research Center, a conservative watch dog of nonprofit groups. “The counties were allowed to correct their vote totals with barely a peep from Secretary of State Mark Ritchie. He just considered all this to be legitimate, and it was their prerogative to do that -- and it looks like he let them get away with murder.” Vadum tells Newsmax, “That basically laid the foundation for the slug fest now going on in the recount contest. He chopped off Coleman’s lead and got it within stealing distance.”
Nov.7, Coleman Leads by 239 Votes – Ritchie’s office announces the State Canvassing Board will convene to begin its supervision of the statewide recount on Nov. 18. “This week,” Ritchie adds, “county election officials have been busy proofing the unofficial results previously submitted to this office’s Web site. Corrections have resulted in a shifting margin which now stands at 239 votes with the advantage to incumbent Republican U.S. Sen. Norm Coleman.” Coleman attorney Fritz Knaak says the campaign is “profoundly suspicious,” adding, “We’re mystified at this apparent pattern of every time there seems to be a change, it happens after hours and it happens in the Franken [campaign’s] favor.”
Nov.8, Coleman Leads by 221 Votes – The New York Times reports that 32 absentee ballots were found after an election worker drove around with them in the back seat of his car for five days. An initial protest from Coleman is withdrawn, and the votes are counted. A document posted on the secretary of state’s Web site says shifting vote counts are “routine,” citing a 2006 election where 2,100 ballot changes occurred after Election Day.
Gateway Pundit has an excellent recap you can read here.
Dick Morris has an excellent piece you should read here.
The Wall St Journal has a piece aptly titled "Funny Business in Minnesota"
Al Frankin himself said it best here:
8 comments:
Hi. I added you to my blogroll so can you add me to your links? Thanks.
As a citizen of WA State, I knew what was going to happen when I heard that the same guy who ran the recount in Wa state 4 years ago was also running the recount for Franken. When you get this guy(can't remember name) and ACORN involved in an electon, watch out. Also saw an interview with Gov. Palenty. When did we stop calling "a spade, a spade"? Appears to me that we've had too much "sensitivity training", instead of "common sense training". I feel sorry for the good people of Minnesota.
Brilliant post. I'll link it tomorrow. This sickens me!
Diary of a theft is dead-on!
I cannot believe that this sort of blatant thing can just go on in the open light!
This sickens me.
The same sort of scandal happened up here in Washington State 4 yrs ago with Christina Gregory & Dino Rossi.
It truly is disgusting to watch it happen in Minnesota. I hope the GOP fight it and don't give in so easily since the "new" count is so clearly corrupted.
BTW - I've added your site to my blog list
Washington state, yes. Second election Rossi got quite a bit less! I know, let's get Roberts, Alito & Thomas from the Supreme Court....
Hyperbole like this does no justice to the many man-hours done in an open and transparent recount process. Minnesotans should be proud and everyone should be motivated knowing just a few votes can make a difference in a close election.
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