I am worried that the Minnesota United States Senate race in effect will
be run by the United States Senate. When one has been around as long as
I have, one has seen things that seem familiar. In the 1974 New
Hampshire election in, one of the State's two Congressmen, Louis C.
Wyman, ran for the Senate. On election night Wyman won by 355 votes but
his opponent demanded a recount. After all the disputed ballots were
counted, Wyman's opponent, John Durkin, was certified the winner of the
Senate seat by ten votes. After another recount Wyman won by two votes.
Durkin appealed to the United States Senate, which, under Article I,
Section 5, of the Constitution, is the final arbiter of such disputes.
The Senate Leadership declared the seat vacant. They told Governor
Meldrim R. Thomson, Jr. to appoint an interim Senator. He brought back
retired Senator Norris Cotton, paving the way for another Wyman-Durkin
race. On August 8, 1975 a special election was held, which Durkin won.
He served in the Senate until 1980.
The same scenario may happen in the Minnesota Senate race. Al Franken
has lost the recount. He may well lose the count of disputed ballots,
too, if the election board allows them to be counted. At that point, if
Franken can't prevail in Federal court, he may turn to Senate Majority
Leader Harry M. Reid (D-NV). Reid could have the Senate wade into the
disputed ballots, as Democrats did in a disputed House seat some years
ago. More likely, however, Reid would have the seat declared vacant,
forcing Coleman and Franken to another election.
Democrats naturally hope to achieve a 60-40 filibuster-proof majority in
the Senate, so it would not be surprising to see them concentrate their
resources in Minnesota and deliver the State for Franken. As the former
Director of the Senate Republican Conference said to me the other day,
"Nothing could demean the Senate as an institution more than to have
Franken as a Member." Perhaps. But that will be up to the citizens of
Minnesota to decide. The reason Franken is so persistent and will not
concede is because he cannot believe that all of those hundreds of
thousands of Obama voters would not have voted for him for Senate. As it
stands now, lots of folks did not want to support Coleman but did not
care to vote for Franken either. If Minnesota were to require another
election to solve the dispute the dynamics would be entirely different.
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