ST. PAUL, Minn. - A three-judge panel begins hearing arguments Monday in Norm Coleman's lawsuit over the result of Minnesota's U.S. Senate recount. Some questions and answers about the legal proceeding:
Q. It's been 2 1/2 months since the election. Why hasn't this been settled yet?
A. When all the ballots were counted after Election Day, Republican Norm Coleman led Democrat Al Franken by 215 votes out of about 2.9 million cast. That lead was small enough to automatically trigger a statewide recount, which took more than a month. Throughout that process, both campaigns were allowed to make legal arguments in favor of accepting or rejecting certain ballots or groups of ballots. At the end of the recount, Franken moved ahead by 225 votes. But state law allowed Coleman to file what's called an "election contest" — a lawsuit — over the issues that came up during the recount.
Q. So exactly why is Coleman suing?
A. The Republican faces losing the Senate seat he held the last six years, and believes he is the rightful winner. He says Franken leads only because of irregularities in the vote count and inconsistent standards for accepting absentee ballots. Coleman is arguing that as many as 5,000 rejected absentees should be added to the count. Another central claim is that election officials in some precincts counted some votes twice because they didn't properly mark duplicates made of some damaged ballots.
Q. Who will decide the case?
A. Three district court judges appointed by Minnesota Supreme Court Justice Alan Page. They are Elizabeth Hayden of Stearns County, Kurt Marben of Pennington County and Denise Reilly of Hennepin County.
Q. What are the chances Coleman will win?