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As expected, the Minnesota Canvassing Board today certified the results of the Board's recount of the Minnesota Senate election, declaring Democrat Al Franken to be the winner by 225 votes. The Canvassing Board's action, however is far from the final word on the election. Minnesota law says that an election result cannot be certified by the Secretary of State until all court challenges to the outcome have been adjudicated. With the result so close, and with strong evidence of improper counting by the canvassing board, incumbent Senator Norm Coleman (R) vowed to contest the Board's decision in court."The actions by the Canvassing Board today are but the first step in what, unfortunately, will now have to be a longer process. This process isn't at the end; it is now just at the beginning. We will contest the actions of the Canvassing Board – – otherwise literally millions of Minnesotans will be disenfranchised.
While we appreciate the efforts of this board to do the work, the reality is that any certification of the vote totals at this point is only preliminary. As this Canvassing Board has recognized, there still exist serious problems with inconsistencies with the administrative recount, and therefore in the validity and reliability of the numbers certified today. There can be no count that is valid when 654 potentially valid absentee votes remain disenfranchised and when some votes are counted twice – – leading to a violation of one of the most sacred principles of our Constitution – – "One person, one vote."
And there can be no justification to report out a total when 133 were included in a count where there are not ballots to support them. Or when a batch of votes were not counted on Election Night, but were miraculously "found" during the recount and included."
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