Confusion over election rules and the crush of Election Day business caused local officials to mistakenly disqualify numerous ballots that remain uncounted to this day, an elections expert testified Friday in the trial over Minnesota's U.S. Senate recount.
The argument that valid but excluded ballots still exist, and should be counted, is the centerpiece of Republican Norm Coleman's court strategy as he challenges the recount results.
The state Canvassing Board counted 933 previously rejected absentee ballots before it certified recount results showing DFLer Al Franken with a 225-vote advantage. But other ballots that were wrongly excluded because of errors and varying standards at local levels have not been counted, said Ramsey County elections chief Joe Mansky.
In some cases, election workers wrongly rejected absentee ballots because signatures accompanying them didn't appear to match those on applications, even though discrepancies can be explained by, say, the shaky hands of elderly voters, he said.
"It's a very hard thing to do because we aren't signature experts," Mansky said.
Other times, he said, election judges rejected absentee ballots for reporting an incorrect driver's license number, even though state law does not require one to be submitted with the ballots.
And some new voters put their registration form inside the secrecy envelope containing their absentee ballot, resulting in the form being overlooked and the ballot rejected as coming from an unregistered voter, he said.
In Ramsey County, Mansky said he believes 62 rejected absentee ballots that were not tallied by the Canvassing Board should have been counted.