WASHINGTON - The national debate over Minnesota's Senate dispute boiled with new energy Tuesday.
Republicans encouraged Norm Coleman to fight on; Democrats pressed him to give up.
Revving up for the clash now headed for the Minnesota Supreme Court, the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) sent out an appeal for donations calling Monday's court decision "a fundamentally misguided ruling that disenfranchises over 4,000 Minnesota voters."
The fundraising message, signed by Texas Sen. John Cornyn, the NRSC chairman, said fundamental principles of due process and equal protection are "under attack in Minnesota."
The ruling, by a three-judge panel, swept aside Coleman's legal claims and declared DFLer Al Franken the winner of the race by 312 votes.
Democrats, noting that Minnesota has gone 100 days without a second U.S. senator, accused the Republicans of stalling to keep Franken from becoming the party's crucial 59th Senate vote -- one shy of a filibuster-proof supermajority.
"Enough is enough," said Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine, the Democratic National Committee chairman. "Former Senator Coleman's insistence on continuing his quixotic quest for this seat at best shows that he is putting his own political ambition ahead of the people, and worst that he is complicit in an effort by national Republicans to deny Al Franken this seat for as long as possible."
Pundits, bloggers and legal scholars also joined the fray, not always in a partisan way.