Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Al Franken, Norm Coleman and the Beautiful Internet

COLUMBUS, OH - MARCH 3: A voter drops off an a...Image by Getty Images via Daylife

Occasionally I go to theuptake.org, the Minnesota community news organization that has streamed all the public moments in courtroom and hearing room, including the news conferences outside those rooms sparked by what went on inside those rooms, that have gone on during the long months of the Minnesota senate recount. A live blog is also going on simultaneously, so you can watch the events and see the words of those commenting on the events.

More often than not, a few minutes hanging around the site get me more recent and more accurate information than I get from the Minneapolis newspapers and TV stations, which the search engines point to.

For instance, those who follow the recount closely know that the three-judge panel appointed by Minnesota Supreme Court justice Carl Eller has already narrowed the universe of absentee ballots that *might* be counted to something just under 5,000, and that yesterday the court divided those disputed ballots into 19 categories and asked the two campaigns to present arguments on whether or not each of those categories should be accepted. They were not talking about individual ballots but about groups of ballots, and the intent certainly seemed to be that they did not want to check out ballots out one at a time but to accept or reject them in groups -- assuming that the ballots were correctly categorized in the first place.

But I don't know if that's in dispute. There's a point at which even one's desire to have the timeliest of news flags. In this case that timeliness, of course, does not mean that I can change the outcome but only that I will not be surprised by the outcome. (Isn't that the motive for so much of our hunger for the up-to-the minute account, the live feed, the flash poll?)

Anyway, I naturally wonder what those 19 ballot categories are, and how many of the ballots potentially in play fall into each category. Skimming the liveblog, I discover that someone has produced that very information set.

Here that marvelous data is.

ABallots Excluded, Even Though Not Marked "Rejected" By Local Election Officials32197224

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BBallots Rejected For No Apparent Or Given Reason16326137

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C1STICKERS: Ballots Rejected Due to Error of Government Clerk or Local Election Official8570857

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C2WRONG BALLOT SENT: Ballots Rejected Due to Error of Government Clerk or Local Election Official18117

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D1Ballots rejected because no application for absentee ballot could be found.19969130

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D2Ballots rejected for no voter signature on envelope, even though voter signed the envelope80377

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D3Ballots rejected for signature mismatch, even though the signatures were from the same voter83027803

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D4Ballots rejected for no witness address even though the address was easily available42141

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D5Ballots rejected for lack of complete witness address13114117

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D6Ballots rejected for lack of proof of residence even though witness indicated voter provided such proof.21310203

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D7Ballots rejected for lack of registration, even though they were sent "Registered Voter " envelope and was actually registered.637133504

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D8Ballots rejected for lack of registration, where voter was sent "Non-Registered Voter " envelope and was actually registered.1280761204

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D9Ballots rejected for lack of proper witness, even though witness was a registered MN voter.3188310

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D10Ballots rejected for being late, even though there is not clear evidence ballot was late.1742172

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D11Absentee ballots from military members received late.36036

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5299
467
4832


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The three columns are original number of ballots in each category, those counted earlier by agreement of the two camps and those still uncounted.


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Hey, there are only 15 categories. Still, the point remains: Man cannot live by Google alone, nor Yahoo, either.


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1 comment:

jini said...

it's driving this minnesotan crazy. all the problems with the absentee ballots are puzzling. the rules are very clear, and the training is precise for election judges. it's hard to understand.