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And Then There Were Three...
Author: BobR    Date: 11/12/2008 13:31:52

So now it's all over but for the recounts and the runoffs. The Senate count stands at 40 Republicans and 57 Democrats, with three races left to be decided. All three represent a Republican senator that the Democrats won't have to win over to break a filibuster. All three are Democrats in tight races with the worst of the worst Republicans.

The Minnesota race is certainly headed for an automatic recount, per state law. Coleman and Franken are in a statistical tie, and it keeps getting closer:
Six days after the election, unofficial results showed Republican Sen. Norm Coleman leading Democratic challenger Al Franken by 206 votes, a difference of about 1/100th of 1 percent that sets the stage for the automatic hand recount that will begin next week.

Monday was the deadline for counties to certify their results. Depending on the unknown number that may not have yet reported them to the state, that 206 figure could still change before the state Canvassing Board meets next week to certify the official total. Only then will the recount begin.

Officials with Hennepin County forwarded their tally Monday to the secretary of state's office, showing that, since initial results Wednesday, Franken's total had increased by 55 votes and Coleman's by 27 in the state's largest county.

This one would be especially sweet, since the only reason Coleman got the seat in the first place is because Paul Wellstone (his incumbent opponent in 2002) died in a plane crash right before the election.

In Alaska, the vote is nowhere close to being completed, but today seems to be the magic day:
Look for the needle to move on Alaska's landmark U.S. Senate race and other tight contests this week, with the Division of Elections planning to tally more than half of the uncounted ballots Wednesday.

For days, the count has been frozen. Sen. Ted Stevens leads Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich by about 3,000 votes with roughly 30 percent of the ballots remaining to be counted, including:

• 61,000 absentee votes.

• More than 20,000 questioned ballots.

• 9,500 early votes.

Of those, at least two-thirds of the absentee votes and nearly all the early votes are expected to be counted Wednesday, said Division Director Gail Fenumiai.

Election workers began poring over questioned ballots Monday in Anchorage, a process that will likely continue through the final count, which is expected Nov. 19.

Meantime, absentee votes are still arriving in the mail and precincts are sending in more questioned ballots.

So keep your eyes and ears peeled today for announcements on new results. This one is still very much in play. Ultimately, Ted Stevens will not take the seat (either by losing or by getting booted by the Senate and his own party), but that would leave Sarah The Palin to fill the seat with her choice of wretched dreck.

And that leaves Georgia, with Saxby Chambliss and Jim Martin heading to a runoff election. That's because in GA, the winner has to get 50%+1 of the votes, and with a Liberarian candidate in the mix, that did not occur. The importance of this cannot be understated - WE CAN STILL DO SOMETHING ABOUT THIS ONE! The other two races involve counts or recounts that are out of the hands of common citizens. The GA race, however, is the presidential race all over again - it's about getting people out to vote on Dec 2 to vote FOR Jim Martin (or against Saxby Chambliss - I'll take that).

The Republicans are not taking chances with this one. They have John McCain, Rudy Guiliani, Mike Huckabee, and Mitt Romney coming for visits to bolster support. The Dems said they will send some of "Obama's team" to help. This is a case where Bill Clinton could really be of help. He was here once for a Jim Martin fundraiser before the election, but he could be a big help now.

Jeanne Cummings at Politico thinks that Obama's best strategy would be to not get involved:
The dilemma carries eerie similarities to one Bill Clinton faced in 1992 when Georgia Democratic Sen. Wyche Fowler wound up in a runoff against Republican challenger Paul Coverdell.

The Fowler-Coverdell contest came just weeks after Clinton’s defeat of President George H. W. Bush. Clinton had won Georgia by about 5,000 votes, and Fowler was about 30,000 votes ahead of Coverdell.

Coverdell framed his candidacy as a last stand against Democratic filibuster-proof majority in the Senate. Clinton and Gore both traveled the state on behalf of Fowler, arguing they needed more allies to implement their agenda.

After a dramatic decline in voter turnout, Fowler wound up losing to the more energized Coverdell camp by about 16,000 votes, and Republicans crowed that it was a signal of Clinton’s already weakened political standing.

Clinton’s allies scoffed at the criticism, but it stung, all the same.

Clinton’s experience and the history of runoffs suggest that Obama’s safest course may be to keep some distance.

While it's true that Jim Martin is a bit of an uknown, and not exactly an inspiring figure, there is plenty of information about Saxby Chambliss out there. Chambliss has run nothing but attack ads the entire campaign and is currently running a scare ad against Martin and - ooga booga - Obama. A House rep from GA went even further, comparing Obama to Hitler, and suggesting Chambliss was the last best hope to keep things in check:
A Republican congressman from Georgia said Monday he fears that President-elect Obama will establish a Gestapo-like security force to impose a Marxist or fascist dictatorship.

"It may sound a bit crazy and off base, but the thing is, he's the one who proposed this national security force," Rep. Paul Broun said of Obama in an interview Monday with The Associated Press. "I'm just trying to bring attention to the fact that we may — may not, I hope not — but we may have a problem with that type of philosophy of radical socialism or Marxism."

Broun cited a July speech by Obama that has circulated on the Internet in which the then-Democratic presidential candidate called for a civilian force to take some of the national security burden off the military.

"That's exactly what Hitler did in Nazi Germany and it's exactly what the Soviet Union did," Broun said. "When he's proposing to have a national security force that's answering to him, that is as strong as the U.S. military, he's showing me signs of being Marxist."

Remember that Chambliss was the douchenozzle that questioned Max Cleland's patriotism and committment to fight terrorism (Max being the triple amputee war vet, and Chambliss being the non-vet).

So for GA and for the United States, it's important that Jim Martin get all the help he can. This is one we CAN do something about. That something is to get out the vote. That means phone banking. Here is his website. Please do whatever you can to help.

Blog Bonus: Rep.-elect Frank Kratovil’s (D-Md.) GOP opponent has conceded the race in Maryland’s 1st district, giving House Democrats a net gain of 20 House seats this election cycle.


 

151 comments (Latest Comment: 11/13/2008 03:10:12 by Raine)
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