Norm Coleman's legal team urged the Minnesota Supreme Court on Thursday to take dramatic action in the U.S. Senate dispute by throwing out a lower-court verdict favoring Al Franken and ordering the counting of thousands of additional absentee ballots.
In a 50-page document detailing his arguments for appeal, lawyers for Republican Coleman called on the high court to overrule the unanimous ruling of a three-judge trial panel that DFLer Franken finished 312 votes ahead in the now six-month-old election.
The trial court applied a stricter standard for counting thousands of disputed absentee ballots than was used on Election Day, said Ben Ginsberg, Coleman's legal spokesman.
As a consequence, Ginsberg said, two constitutional principles were violated -- equal protection, because similar ballots were counted differently, and due process, because the court imposed different rules to count the ballots after the election was over.
The remedy, the Coleman brief says, is either to take out a proportion of already-counted ballots that the trial court's stricter standard has made illegal, or to count additional ballots -- at least 4,900 -- similar to ones included by local officials on Election Day.
A third remedy mentioned is that the court throw out the election as unable to produce a winner, although state law doesn't provide for a new election.
Ginsberg said Coleman's lawyers are confident the argument will work because the state Supreme Court has broader authority than either the state Canvassing Board, which oversaw the recount, or the trial court, which presided over Coleman's subsequent challenge, called a contest.
"The Supreme Court, as the highest court in the state, has the obvious authority ... to look at all this and order the contest court to look at these things," Ginsberg said.