via Franken To Be Declared Senate Victor In Minnesota.
AMY FORLITI | January 5, 2009 07:21 AM EST | 
CHEERS!
MINNEAPOLIS — The state Canvassing Board was poised to certify the results of the recount in Minnesota’s grueling Senate election in Al Franken’s favor _ but that doesn’t mean the race is definitely over.
The board was to meet Monday and was expected to declare which candidate received the most overall votes from nearly 3 million ballots cast. The la
test numbers showed Franken, a democrat, with a 225-vote lead over Republican Sen. Norm Coleman, who led Franken on election night.
But after the announcement, there will be a seven-day waiting period before an election certificate is completed. If any lawsuits are filed during that waiting period, certification is conditional until the issue is settled in court.
JEERS!
Lawyers for both campaigns have laid the groundwork for lawsuits through public comments and legal maneuvering. In recent weeks, as Franken clung to a small lead, Coleman’s lawyers promised a lawsuit over their claim that some ballots duplicated on election night wound up being counted twice in the recount.
Norm Coleman said after the first count in which he was leading(paraphrasing) that Minnesota should do a group hug and have a kumabaya moment and move on. Now he’s all about Norm. C’mon man, where’s the love?
test numbers showed Franken, a democrat, with a 225-vote lead over Republican Sen. Norm Coleman, who led Franken on election night.