The state Canvassing Board began sifting through the first of 1,500 challenged ballots in the disputed U.S. Senate race this afternoon, providing a tedious -- but sometimes eye-opening -- lesson in democracy under the gaze of reporters and lawyers for the campaigns of Republican Sen. Norm Coleman and DFLer Al Franken.
The process, at the outset anyway, was grindingly slow. In the first two hours, the board had ruled on 46 votes challenged by Franken. Of those, the board awarded 26 votes to Coleman, 7 to Franken and 13 to the pile for ballots where intend couldn't be determined or were disqualified because of marks that might identify the voter.
At times, the five-member board dispensed with some challenges in less than 30 seconds. But more often in the early going, members became bogged down in a morass of procedure and occasional disputes over what voters intended to communicate through wildly incomprehensible ballot markings.
Attorneys for the campaigns asked the board for permission to give it their views on controversial ballots, a request that was reluctantly granted for brief statements. "If we allot a specific amount of time, we could be here until Christmas -- next year," said Supreme Court Associate Justice G. Barry Anderson.
Gary Poser, state elections director, displayed the first of 441 ballots challenged by the Franken campaign on video screens in the legislative hearing room in St. Paul -- a vote from an Andover precinct in Anoka County. It showed marks in the ovals for both Franken and Coleman, but a more irregular one in Franken's.
Board Chairman Mark Ritchie, the secretary of state and a DFLer, moved to reject the challenge. After a second, the board unanimously approved the motion and awarded the vote to Coleman. It all took one minute.
"Can I just say, it felt really good to get started on this?" Ramsey County District Judge Kathleen Gearin said. "Yes, ma'am," Ritchie said.
And then it was off to the races. During the first hour, most of Franken's challenges were rejected, as is expected for most. But Franken picked up about 15 percent of the challenges he had raised, a 1-in-6 ratio that may be higher than some anticipated.