What seemed a far-fetched math geek dream this morning came true tonight: On Day Three of Minnesota’s U.S. Senate recount, the Al Franken and Norm Coleman campaigns again increased the number of challenged ballots by more than 40 percent over the previous day. In fact, both campaigns increased their challenged-ballot total by 48 percent.
Ballots that failed to satisfy Coleman’s crew today numbered 404, for a three-day total of 778. Franken’s forces found 387 ballots questionable, for a grand total (so far) of 747.
That makes a combined total of 1,525 challenged ballots with only 60 percent of ballots recounted statewide — already surpassing the 1,500 mark which Secretary of State Mark Ritchie predicted only yesterday would be the number of challenged ballots from the entire recount that the State Canvassing Board would have to review. It’s a number that represents an arms race of ballot-attrition that both Coleman and Franken’s camp condemned today — even as their campaigns ramped up the rejections.
It’s also a number that already dwarves by a factor of 13 the dwindling gap between Franken and Coleman, which now stands at 115. Unless the margin takes a giant leap over the remainder of the recount, the Canvassing Board looks to be the decider in Minnesota’s senate-election drama.
And the Minnesota Independent — which dared to predict in a headline this morning that the challenged-ballot stack could reach 2,500 — turns out to have sharper number-radar than even fivethirtyeight.com’s Nate Silver, who yesterday guesstimated 1,800.
But not to get too high on our high horse, we note that Silver is now looking closely at the number of challenges per 10,000 votes and finding that the Franken campaign on Day Three challenged 7.5 ballots per 10,000, while Coleman’s figures was 7.2, Both numbers represent a doubling of challenge rates from the first two days, Silver says.
Note: The figures in this post are based on the Secretary of State’s official statistics that were released at 8 p.m. Friday. The Star Tribune has been compiling its own totals which differ from the state’s because they include later and in some cases different information. On Friday the Franken campaign claimed its gap with Coleman stood at fewer than 100 votes, counting election officials’ initial decisions on ballots that were later challenged.






3 Comments »
Comment posted November 22, 2008 @ 1:36 pm
As Franken laments frivolous channlenges, how many of the 1500 challenges are from Franken and how many are from Coleman?
Comment posted November 23, 2008 @ 1:28 pm
778 Coleman, 747 Franken. Read the article before leaving a comment next time buddy.
Comment posted November 23, 2008 @ 2:49 pm
I propose a run-off ballot for just these two candidates - no “Lizard Peoples Party” this time.
And this time - we spend some time teaching our voters how to fill in a circle with ink.
Standardized testing in the schools is GOOD for something - it provides training for filling in little circles.
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