How Al Franken stole the election
The 'Absentee' Senator
Mr. Franken trailed Mr. Coleman by 725 votes after the initial count on election night, and 215 after the first canvass. The Democrat's strategy from the start was to manipulate the recount in a way that would discover votes that could add to his total. The Franken legal team swarmed the recount, aggressively demanding that votes that had been disqualified be added to his count, while others be denied for Mr. Coleman.
But the team's real goldmine were absentee ballots, thousands of which the Franken team claimed had been mistakenly rejected. While Mr. Coleman's lawyers demanded a uniform standard for how counties should re-evaluate these rejected ballots, the Franken team ginned up an additional 1,350 absentees from Franken-leaning counties. By the time this treasure hunt ended, Mr. Franken was 312 votes up, and Mr. Coleman was left to file legal briefs.
What Mr. Franken understood was that courts would later be loathe to overrule decisions made by the canvassing board, however arbitrary those decisions were. He was right. The three-judge panel overseeing the Coleman legal challenge, and the Supreme Court that reviewed the panel's findings, in essence found that Mr. Coleman hadn't demonstrated a willful or malicious attempt on behalf of officials to deny him the election. And so they refused to reopen what had become a forbidding tangle of irregularities. Mr. Coleman didn't lose the election. He lost the fight to stop the state canvassing board from changing the vote-counting rules after the fact.
Simple math tells you that the recount totals have been manipulated. In such a close election, the recount totals for both candidates should have been proportionately just as close if the process was fair. However, Franken received over 400 more votes than Coleman, blowing proportion out of the water. Had Franken won by a few dozen votes, that would fall well within the realm of possibility in a fair recount. But over 400? Give me a break!
Labels: al franken, election, minnesota, norm coleman






4 Comments:
well a couple hundred ballots found in the trunk of a poll supervisor after the election that were counted and were all democrat is a good clue.
The crooks in the state should not have allowed those ballots that was a crime in and of itself.
I'm not so concerned about a minuscule amount of ballots which may or may not have been in someone's trunk as I am about the large number of felons who cast votes illegally in the election.
From Steve from www.allhomebased.com
Voter Fraud in Minnesota. Al Franken VS Coleman.
Remember that Coleman won on election night (100% of local news agencies reported this), but on re-count months later Fraken stole the election. Just anounced yesterday in Hennepin County (Minnesota) there were 47 felons who are unauthorized to vote, but the voted anyway. Most are to have expected to vote for Franken. But Hennepin County is only one of many counties in Minnesota.
47 in one county. How many in the entire state? Now it looks like there will be as much Democratic fraud in this year's election.
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