State Of The Senate Races In Minnesota, Alaska, And Georgia

 There is a lot of confusion and misinformation that I am seeing about the Senate races that currently hang in the balance in the states of Minnesota, Alaska, and Georgia. The Democrats hold 57 Senate seats as of this writing, and were they to win all three of these contested races they would hit the magic number of 60. 

This of course can not be allowed to happen, and it is imperative that Republicans mobilize in full force in order to prevent these seats from turning to Democratic hands. All three are seats that are filled by incumbent Republicans, one who has now been conviced on several felonies, which complicates his bid for re-election.

Minnesota, could potentially be the closest and therefor most hotly contested race. As of this writing, because of corrupt vote counting, or fair vote counting, depending of course on your party, incumbent Norm Coleman leads by .007% of the vote, or just 206 ballots. Anything under .5% triggers a mandatory recount, which will begin on November 18th. Even before the recount, Franken has been gaining. On election night, Coleman led by more than 700 votes, but has lost ground quickly. It is interesting to note, the gains Franken has made outperforms how Democrats including Obama performed in Minnesota, which raises some eyebrows. I believe there is some peculiar vote counting going on, for this reason. This race will be decided by court battles and long hand recounts. In the end, I think Franken is in the stronger position, despite the current tally. I believe Coleman is in serious trouble, and has a good chance of losing his seat, in fact, I believe Franken will win it, and I call this seat for the Democrats. 

In Alaska, the race is very close as well. Incumbent Senator Ted Stevens leads by only 1.5% over Democratic challenger Mark Begich, a 3,257 vote lead. Stevens will most likely pull it out, despite his conviction and the close race. However, should he win, it is almost certain he will resign, which under Alaska law will trigger a special election. The only reason Mark Begich came close to defeating Stevens is because Stevens is seen as corrupt, a fresh non incumbent, young Republican would easily win a special election regardless of how strong a contender the Democrats throw at the race. Many think should this scenario come to pass, Sarah Palin is likely to run to fill the seat, she is immensely popular in Alaska and would win the seat easily. This seat is safe for Republicans, it is just unclear which Republican will be sitting in it when the dust settles. 

The last race is truly a toss up. Georgia Senator Saxby Chambliss won the popular vote, but fell .2% short of the 50% mark needed to avoid a run off. Allen Buckley, the Libertarian candidate, siphoned 4% of the votes off, almost ensuring the Dec. 2nd runoff. Essentially, turnout is the key in this election. There is no presidential vote this time around, and this will work to make turnout very low, most likely below 45%. Whoever gets the most turnout wins, as the Libertarian is not a factor this time, come Dec. 2nd, one man will have a plurality of the vote. Traditionally, the Democrats get-out-the-vote machine is superior to that of the Republicans, and I am very worried about Chambliss' seat. There is no way to make a good prediction, but if I was forced to say who is in the better position, I would say Democrat Jim Martin. Again, this race is very close though, and it is the only one that will be decided by the voters. 

By my tally, the Senate balance of power looks like this. Currently, the Democrats have 57 seats, I predice they will win Coleman's seat in Minnesota, bringing them to 58. I predict a Republican will win the Alaska seat, but I have not the slightest clue who. This keeps the balance at 58. Should Martin win the Georgia seat, which is more likely I think then Chambliss winnning, then the balance shifts to 59, one vote shy of 60.

Of course, Democrats do not need 60 to get past a filibuster. With 59 votes, they can almost always pick off a moderate Republican to support the measure and ram legislation through. Effectively, the Democrats have a working majority in both houses, and they have a president in the White House who is more than willing to sign there legislation. Now, all that remains to be seen is how they will use, or abuse, this new power. 

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As for Stevens

If the repubicans really do have a 10,000 advantage among the absentee ballots, then it's pretty difficult for Begich to win the seat (though I suppose Begich could be drawing a lot of cross-over support but it would have to be a lot).

the MN recount will add provisionals

Keep in mind, the recount in Minnesota will include provisional ballots that are not part of the original certification. That means the numbers WILL change, so there may be nothing illegal or unethical going on simply because they change.

That doesn't mean there isn't or won't be funny stuff going on, but just that seeing different numbers in the recount is not evidence of that alone.

I am concerned that there may indeed be some funny stuff going on in the certification. There were some reasonable changes, but others look fishy. Even if there is some funny Democratic stuff happening, that does not mean the Franken campaign is involved, but it could taint the legitimacy of the election.

disclaimer: I would love to see Franken win. He is quite a bit more liberal than me, but I believe he is an authentic person whereas Norm Coleman has already demonstrated he is corrupt. If Coleman wins the seat, the GOP is going to be dragged down by his corruption scandals.

then I wish someone like you were keeping an eye on things

It's likely that most of the problems were simply typos, getting corrected. And there's nothing funny about Franken getting more votes than Coleman -- a lot of the "I checked instead of filling in the bubble" are likely to be democratic (minority voters and first time voters versus old folks)

 We will see. I believe that

 We will see. I believe that Franken will win it, not by much, but I think he will. I am not trying to say Franken is doing anything unethical in this recount, I think someone is though. The rate at which Franken is gaining votes is far disproprotionate to how other Democrats, and he himself, performed on election day. Sounds like a fishy count to me.

I am inclined to agree

I am going to withhold my personal judgement on this until we see the final numbers.

I am pretty fed up with vote tampering and voter suppression, though, from both parties.

I think you're projecting...

I don't think that the Democrats generally do much in terms of vote supression (we can talk about the Philly machine's demands for getout the vote money, *snerk*).

However, I'd love to see folks from here and kos get together to come up with a comprehensive solution to the election problem. In my opinion, it should include:

1. Voting Day Holiday -- if some people have to spend six hours in line, for the love of god, give them the day off. It helps to encourage civics, anyway. If not this, move the election to Sunday (and give out absentee ballots for anyone who refuses to vote then).

2. Tie a National voter registration to Post Office and DMV. If you move, and change your driver's license address, you should automatically get a new voter registration card. AND you should be removed from your last residence. Ditto for Post Office.

3. Give everyone the option to vote by mail. There have been reports of voter intimidation, and this will allow everyone to get a fair shot to vote -- even if they're ill.

4. For places that continue to have vote-in-person, Can we please get some paper records?

5. Also for vote-in-person, there should be greater care taken to prevent provisionals and hand recounts. Don't let them leave until they've actually filled in the ballot correctly. Also ask people if they really meant to not vote for President. This isn't difficult, and it saves headaches later.

well, if I had to stereotype..

which I really don't want to do.. I'd say the GOP leans more on voter suppression while the Dems count creatively. The big numbers, in my opinion, are in voter suppression which just means that the GOP is smarter about cheating.

yeah, I gotta say that the Montanan GOP seems pretty honest

turning on the guy who wanted to pull crap.

I don't think counting creatively is anything to worry about,because hand recounts tend to be done by old ladies and gents with canes who are bipartisan (at least if PA is any indication).

For democrats, it's simply easier and safer to work on voter turnout, rather than trying to get people to vote twice or pull any shenanigans. (NOTE: this does not mean that Lieberman did not bus homeless people in to vote for him. lieberman's still an ass, and I think that other Democrats definitely have the possibility of doing more creative "voter outreach" -- nothing outright illegal, but paying getoutthevote money is just bad form)