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Franken win gives Dems 60 Senate seats

Democrat Franken wins protracted Minn. Senate race

Updated: Wednesday, 01 Jul 2009, 6:11 AM CDT
Published : Wednesday, 01 Jul 2009, 6:10 AM CDT

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - Al Franken refused his rival's calls for an election night concession last November, choosing instead to begin vote counting and courtroom haggling that stretched almost eight months and ultimately landed him a seat in the U.S. Senate.

Franken's victory over Republican Norm Coleman gives Democrats 60 Senate seats, the critical number needed to overcome Republican filibusters. When Franken is seated, which could come as early as next week, his party will have a majority not reached on either side of the aisle in some three decades.

Coleman conceded the election hours after a unanimous state Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that Franken — who moved into politics with books poking fun at conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh — should be certified the winner. In doing so, Coleman pulled the plug on a bitter election that was decided by 312 votes out of almost 2.9 million cast.

"When you win an election this close, you know not one bit of effort went to waste," Franken told reporters outside his downtown Minneapolis town house, accompanied by his wife. "The way I see it, I'm not going to Washington to be the 60th Democratic senator, I'm going to Washington to be the second senator from Minnesota."

Coleman could have carried his fight into federal court, but it was unlikely to overturn the state Supreme Court's decision.

"Sure I wanted to win. I thought we had a better case. But the court has spoken," Coleman said outside his St. Paul home. Appearing relaxed and upbeat, Coleman said he congratulated Franken and had no regrets about the fight. He brushed aside a question about whether he would run for governor in 2010.

Franken declared his candidacy more than two years ago, and he and Coleman combined to spend $50 million pursuing the seat. That's more than double what was spent in 2002, when Coleman won the seat that had been held by the late Paul Wellstone.

Both Franken and Coleman kept low profiles in the months since Election Day, though Franken has taken some steps to ensure a quick transition by appointing a staff in waiting that includes communications staffers, a chief of staff and a state director.

"We've been doing a lot. I've been going back and forth to Washington," Franken said Tuesday. "We've been using this time, I think, pretty productively."

Franken said he had been told his assignments would include the Judiciary Committee, a role that would put him immediately in the thick of confirmation hearings over Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor.

When Coleman ended election night ahead by several hundred votes, he called on Franken to concede. The Democrat refused, and the thin margin triggered an automatic recount that put Franken ahead by 225 votes. Coleman challenged those results, but a review by a three-judge panel expanded Franken's lead to 312 votes.

Coleman appealed to the state's high court, arguing election officials across Minnesota were inconsistent with rules on absentee ballots, unfairly robbing thousands of people of their votes. But the state's high court voted 5-0 that there was no reason to apply a more lenient standard in judging absentees, as Coleman wanted, than the law required.

"I think what you had was 12 judges look at this through the canvassing process, through the recount and throughout the trial, and all agreeing unanimously that I won more votes than anybody else in the election," Franken said.

Franken, 58, has come a long way from the goofy 1980s "SNL" skits where he mocked politicians, portrayed the self-affirming Stuart Smalley and pranced around in little more than a Speedo. His career evolved in the 1990s with books harpooning Limbaugh and he later gained a liberal following as a radio show host on the "Air America" network.

Minnesota has put an entertainer in office before. In 1998, former pro wrestler Jesse Ventura captured the governor's office with an outsider third-party run. He served one term, then resumed private life without seeking re-election.

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Associated Press Special Correspondent David Espo and AP Writer Henry C. Jackson contributed to this report from Washington. AP Writer Patrick Condon contributed from Minneapolis.

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Analysis: Franken doesn't guarantee Dems success
DAVID ESPO, AP Special Correspondent

Al Franken's victory in the marathon Minnesota Senate race gives Democrats control of 60 seats, the number needed to overcome any Republican filibuster aimed at blocking elements of President Barack Obama's ambitious agenda.

But numbers aren't the same as votes in the Senate. And to enact administration priorities on health care, energy and other issues, Democrats will have to remain as united in support of legislation as Republicans are in opposition, no easy task in an institution where lawmakers weigh regional concerns, ideology and narrow political self-interest as well as party loyalty.

"At 60, every member has a veto," says Eric Ueland, who was chief of staff to former Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn. Meaning that

any of the 60 senators — 58 Democrats and two Democratic-leaning independents — gain added leverage in negotiations with the White House or even their own leadership.

In the current lineup, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid can be certain of success only to the extent that he can hold Sen. Bernard Sanders, a Vermont liberal, and Sen. Ben Nelson, a Nebraska conservative, together, along with 58 other strong-minded senators of varying views and priorities.

Pragmatically, there are other complications confronting Senate Democrats, in the form of prolonged illnesses of two Senate veterans. Sen. Robert Byrd, 91, of West Virginia, was released from the hospital recently after treatment for a staph infection, and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts was operated on more than a year ago for brain cancer.

Neither man has been in the Capitol for weeks, and it is not known when, or even whether, they will return. Without them, Democrats can count only 58 votes.

Franken's victory was sealed Tuesday when the Minnesota Supreme Court rejected former Sen. Norm Coleman's challenge to last fall's election. The winner said he was "thrilled and honored" with the outcome. The loser e-mailed his supporters as he was conceding publicly, a possible step toward a gubernatorial race next year.

Franken's victory is also likely to raise the hopes of Democratic interests for prospects of passage of numerous bills. Democrats already are working to limit such expectations.

"Sen.-elect Franken's presence will not mean that Democrats will just be able to jam through our agenda," said Jim Manley, spokesman for Reid. "Nor does it make it any less critical for Democrats and Republicans to work together."

He added that the Democratic caucus is diverse. "No one's vote is ever automatic, and of course, up until now we have gotten very little to no help from Republicans, who are simply saying no to everything and betting on this president to fail," he added.

Republicans argue the opposite, that Democrats have made little attempt to seek common ground, and look only for a small number of converts, as they did in passing the $787 billion economic stimulus legislation last winter.

Sen. Mitch McConnell, the Republican leader, warned of the impact of a 60-vote majority when Sen. Arlen Specter, a former Republican, switched parties in April, leaving Democrats with control of 59.

"What this means, if we are not successful in Minnesota, as you know, is that the Democrats, at least on paper, will have 60 votes. I think the danger of that for the country is that there won't automatically be an ability to restrain the excess that is typically associated with big majorities and single-party rule," he said.

"So I think the threat to the country presented by this defection really relates to the issue of whether or not in the United States of America our people want the majority to have whatever it wants without restraint, without a check or a balance."

If that sounds like a theme for the 2010 congressional campaign, so be it.

In fact, to the extent that individual Democrats believe they will be judged at the polls in 2010 on how well they can govern, the 60th vote is of significant advantage. But to the extent that any one of them fears being attacked as the deciding vote for legislation that is intensely controversial — a health care bill that taxes some medical benefits, for example, or an energy bill that Republicans allege includes a new tax on consumers — it will be anything but that.

An early test may come this summer, when Democrats hope to have health care legislation on the floor of the Senate. Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, has been seeking agreement on a bipartisan plan with a handful of Republicans. But if those talks falter, Democrats may need 60 votes to advance one of the administration's highest priorities.

Which may explain why the White House said in a statement Tuesday that Obama looks forward to working with Franken "to build a new foundation for growth and prosperity by lowering health care costs and investing in the kind of clean energy jobs and industries that will help America lead in the 21st century."

Copyright Associated Press, Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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