Minnesota's Senate recount played out on three fronts Friday: local officials readied unopened
absentee ballots for counting this weekend, the state's highest court kept a legal door open for Sen. Norm Coleman, and a top Republican in Washington hinted at a Capitol battle ahead.
(01/02/2009)
Gov. Tim Pawlenty is perplexed
over a Supreme Court order that gives the U.S. Senate campaigns so
much power in determining which uncounted absentee ballots get into
the recount.
(01/02/2009)
Midday looks back at some of the year's most memorable stories from Minnesota Public Radio reporters.
(Midday, 01/02/2009)
Today is the deadline for local election officials to submit wrongly rejected absentee ballots in the U.S. Senate recount. The Coleman campaign is seeking a court order changing the process to determine which rejected ballots should included.
(01/02/2009)
Republican Senator Norm Coleman's campaign is once again asking the Minnesota Supreme Court to intervene in the counting of wrongly rejected absentee ballots.
(12/31/2008)
In theory, Minnesotans whose absentee ballots were rejected, reconsidered, then rejected again have a last chance to get their voice heard before the end of the state's U.S. Senate recount. In practice, they're probably out of luck.
(12/31/2008)