If you're not at least a bit confused by the U.S. Senate trial, you haven't been paying attention. After slogging along for five weeks, you're forgiven for feeling bogged down in a swamp of election minutia. Absentee ballots counted and uncounted. Original ballots and duplicates. Ballots lost and ballots found. Ballots still missing. What does it all mean and where is it heading?
Q What's at stake in this case?
A A U.S. Senate seat, of course. But which case? There are at least two in the works. The trial in St. Paul is intended to figure out whether Republican Norm Coleman or Democrat Al Franken got the most legitimate votes under a state law interpreted by three judges. But Coleman also is widely believed to be preparing to challenge the fundamental fairness of the state election system in appeals to the Minnesota Supreme Court or federal courts. That's if he loses the trial. Don't look for Coleman to complain about fairness if he wins.
Q Why has this trial gone on so long?
A Because Franken and Coleman shook down supporters for tens of millions to wage a bitter election campaign and they owe them a good show in overtime. They've spent even more money to enlist battalions of lawyers who earn their keep by filing reams of motions and memorandums. With much at stake in the Senate, neither candidate can afford to disappoint his base. Labor unions want Franken to seal the deal. Business leaders don't want Coleman to quit.
Q What are the main areas of dispute?
A There are three. There is Coleman's claim that more than 100 votes in DFL-heavy Minneapolis were counted twice after copies of damaged ballots were fed into tabulating machines. He also has questioned whether Franken was helped by the way officials responded when 132 ballots disappeared from another DFL stronghold. The Democrat says there's no evidence of real problems in either of those situations.
By far most important, the two sides are scrapping over thousands of absentee ballots.