The Great Minnesota Recount continued yesterday with a fight over 7 missing ballots in Ward 5 of St. Paul. The initial count on Nov. 4 was seven higher than the number of ballots in the box. The ward went for Franken, so he protested over the missing ballots. The elections manager said maybe they ran seven ballots through twice on election day. The election is close enough that it is worth making a federal case out of the seven missing ballots.
But the real fight is over 300 disputed ballots and thousands of rejected absentee ballots. They were rejected for all kinds of reasons. The Franken camp wants them to be examined one at a time to see if there is a valid reason for rejecting them. It is possible that some were rejected in error or because a state data base contains an error. The canvassing board will meet Wednesday to consider the issue. Technically, Coleman is now 210 votes ahead but with 3000+ challenges, this number means nothing because many of the challenges are totally bogus and just intended to reduce the other guy's number in the daily press release.
Gov. Ruth Ann Minner (D-DE) has selected Joe Biden's long-time senior aide, Ted Kaufman, to replace Biden in the Senate. Kaufman said he has no interest in running for election in 2010, clearing the path for Biden's son, Beau Biden, to run in 2010. Beau Biden was elected attorney general but is currently preparing to be deployed to Iraq for a year.
Democrat Tom Perriello has defeated Rep. Virgil Goode (R-VA) in VA-05 by 745 votes. Goode is asking for a recount, but a change of 745 is a lot for a recount. Odds are that Perriello wins this one.
President-elect Barack Obama named his economic team yesterday. They are:
It is far from clear what everybody's responsibilities are, other than giving the President advice. On Friday, when Geithner's name was leaked, the Dow shot up 494 points. Today it rallied another 397 points. Clearly Wall St. is very happy with Obama's choices. This is the biggest two day jump in 20 years.
None of the top five government economists are dumb bunnies. These four plus Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke all have graduate degrees. M.I.T. is the big winner with three of the five being alumni. Harvard comes in second with two alumni. All in all, Cambridge, MA hasn't scored so well since the Kennedy administration. Here is where the top five went to school.
Person | Bachelors degree | Graduate degree |
Melody Barnes | University of North Carolina | J.D. University of Michigan |
Ben Bernanke | Harvard | Ph.D. M.I.T. |
Timothy Geithner | Dartmouth | M.A. Johns Hopkins |
Christina Romer | College of William and Mary | Ph.D. M.I.T. |
Larry Summers | M.I.T. | Ph.D. Harvard |
After winning six Senate seats in 2006 and at least seven in 2008, Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) has decided he has had enough running the DSCC and will not run it in 2010. Schumer's resignation was expected. An oft-mentioned successor is Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ), one of the three Latinos in the Senate (along with Ken Salazar of Colorado and Mel Martinez of Florida).