With a New Year's Eve noisemaker that could further prolong the U.S. Senate recount, Sen. Norm Coleman's campaign asked the Minnesota Supreme Court late Wednesday to scrap the reviews of wrongly rejected absentee ballots underway across the state and instead have all such ballots reviewed by state and campaign officials in St. Paul.
There was no word Wednesday evening on when the court would rule on the request, which would require that the review of about 1,350 absentee ballots that began around the state this week start over.
Hundreds of additional ballots would also have to be reconsidered under the campaign's request.
"We're talking about enfranchising people," said Coleman recount attorney Fritz Knaak.
But a recount attorney for Democrat Al Franken said that his campaign would fight the move and was confident it would fail.
"They are now back ... asking for a do-over" even though the process ordered by the Supreme Court is nearly finished, said Marc Elias, a Franken attorney.
"We're simply not prepared to allow them to rewrite those rules," he said.
Franken took an unofficial 49-vote lead over Republican Coleman Monday after the state Canvassing Board finished tallying votes previously challenged by the campaigns.