
Noah Kunin (Aaron Landry, Flickr)
When it comes to rejection and Norm Coleman’s campaign, Noah Kunin knows a thing or two. As senior political correspondent for The UpTake, he’s seen his questions ignored at official Coleman press conferences; his UpTake colleagues have been dubbed not “legitimate media” and refused access to campaign “media availabilities“; and GOP chair Ron Carey called The UpTake a “partisan, liberal blog” as a way of attacking Secretary of State Mark Ritchie, who referenced The UpTake’s video feeds in an email.
But what Kunin wasn’t prepared for was the rejection of his absentee ballot. This afternoon, Kunin sent out a message on Twitter from the Senate contest trial that his name appeared in a database of some 150 names of voters whose absentee ballots Team Coleman alleges were rejected. (His last name was misspelled “Kunim,” an error on the Coleman team’s part, he says; he checked with his Plymouth polling place, where it was correctly spelled.) He hasn’t yet responded to my query for comment, but the Pioneer Press’ Rachel Stassen-Berger, who has likely covered as many hours of the recount and contest as Kunin has, did. “That is righteously funny,” he said.
Update: Reached this afternoon, Kunin said he was unaware that his absentee ballot was rejected. “My brain is pretty blown right now.” He’s confused about why his ballot was rejected. He’s certain his ballot was witnessed correctly, sealed in the proper envelope and mailed properly. In fact, since he was close to the deadline, he over-stamped: “I remember distinctly putting extra stamps on it; I wanted to overpay just to make sure it got there.”
How has this news been received in the courtroom?
“The Coleman campaign has been cool to this revelation,” Kunin says. “We’ll see if I’m called to the stand or not.”
As for the earlier rejections of The UpTake from Coleman’s events, perhaps that problem will ease up a bit. This week, The UpTake was officially accepted into the capitol press corps [pdf].
Photo courtesy of Aaron Landry.













4 Comments »
Comment posted February 4, 2009 @ 2:33 pm
Who ever thought that the contest could get any funnier than the Lizard People ballot? Thanks for a story that lands the pitch-perfect ironic note on the prowess of Coleman’s legal team.
Comment posted February 4, 2009 @ 2:44 pm
Talk about a fly in Normie’s chardonnay!
If that’s not ironic I don’t know what is. I seriously thought that the 4800 ballots were cherry picked by the coleman legal team but now I’m thinking the really are just grasping at straws and trying to run out the clock. I’m assuming that Kunin is a democrat of course.
Comment posted February 4, 2009 @ 4:46 pm
I bet Eric “Scarf Boy” Eskola had “no commenet” too.
Comment posted February 4, 2009 @ 5:07 pm
Just now on the uptake live feed, Kunin explained why he voted absentee (posted in Grant Park on election day) and declined to say how he voted.
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