Back to the future: How Mabel’s messed-up vote in 1975 could decide the Coleman-Franken contest
However unlikely it may seem at the beginning, if all goes according to plan, this post will eventually shed some light on at least one of the reasons that Al Franken is winning the election contest.
In 1975, a bitterly fought election campaign occurred in the Washington County (Minnesota) township of Grey Cloud Island for the (I'm sure very important) office of township supervisor.
A Grey Cloud Island Township woman (the woman is not named in the court ruling that eventually arose from this matter, so I'm just going to call her Mabel) received an absentee ballot without properly applying for it and therefore without making the required pledges that she was a registered voter, a resident of the township and so forth, all of which are required before an absentee could be issued. The Grey Cloud Island Township clerk actually handed a blank absentee ballot to Mabel's husband. Perhaps with all good intentions and hoping to save trouble and bother for Mabel, the clerk also kindly signed the ballot, in advance, indicating that he had witnessed Mabel's vote (to confirm, he hadn't witnessed her vote, Mabel hadn't even received the ballot yet when the clerk signed the blank ballot).
Mabel filled out her ballot and put it in the return envelope, as required but did not sign the envelope as required by law. In short, Mabel and the clerk did almost nothing right and those of us who have been living in Recountland these last months know that her ballot envelope should have been roundly and summarily rejected. The election judges couldn't have known about the bad witnessing, but they should have noticed that the envelope wasn't signed and they should have put Mabel's envelope into the do-not-count pile. But, as you may have surmised, the election judges didn't do that. They opened Mabel's flawed envelope and put her ballot in with the others to count.
The day after the election, the Grey Cloud Island Township Canvassing Board met and certified that in that township supervisor race, candidate Homer Gannaway had received 102 votes while his opponent, Thomas Bell, received just 101. Perhaps you saw this coming when I obsessed on Mabel.
Mr. Bell contested the result (much as Norm Coleman has contested the Minnesota Canvassing Board certification of Al Franken) and, as in the current case, a full trial was held during which, among other things, the facts about Mabel's bad ballot were put into the record. But the contest court ruled that Mabel's vote couldn't be removed from the count.
Important precedent
Mr. Bell took his case to the state Supreme Court (wouldn't you?) where he not only lost again, but created an important precedent on the meaning of Minnesota law on the subject of flawed absentee ballots.
Bell v. Gannaway (PDF) was a split decision. But the court's majority made several rulings that are now standing in the way of Team Coleman's motions and arguments. Basically, ever since Franken pulled ahead in the count, Coleman has been trying to get either or both of two things. He wants the court to adopt a lenient standard for considering the roughly 12,000 absentee ballots that were rejected on Election Night because of various flaws of signature, registration, witnessing or other requirements for absentee voting, and/or Coleman wants the court to acknowledge that many absentee ballots counted before the contest phase of the current process were flawed, were judged against a low standard of compliance with the requirements, and perhaps should be in some way uncounted (or have so polluted the pile of counted ballots that the whole election should be re-run).
Unfortunately for Coleman, the Bell v. Gannaway court messed up his arguments coming and going. The court wrote that while adult Minnesota citizens have a right to vote, voting absentee is more of a privilege than a right and that the state must insist that the absentee voter fulfill all the special requirements for applying for a ballot, filling it out it, signing it, having it witnessed and sending it in. Said the Bell court, all the crossing of t's and dotting of i's "must be held to be mandatory" and voters seeking the privilege of voting without coming to the polling place on election day "must be held to a strict compliance" standard." Bell v. Gannaway may be new to you and me, but in Minnesota election law cases, I gather it comes up, and its "strict compliance" standard on absentee ballots is cited by the courts as the law of the land whenever someone argues for a lesser standard. Bell's "strict compliance" langauge has been thrown in Team Coleman's face by the Franken side or even by the judges on several occasions.
In their famous (or, if you are rooting for Coleman, infamous) order of Feb. 13, the ThreeJudges cited Bell v. Gannaway at least four times (I may have missed more) in ordering a strict compliance standard and rejecting Coleman’s argument that, to make up for all the bad absentee ballots that might already be in the count, they had to allow hundreds, maybe thousands of additional ballots. The case has been downhill for Coleman ever since, and Coleman attorney Ben Ginsberg has called repeatedly for the judges to revisit what he always calls the "Friday the 13th" order and come to a different conclusion. So far, not yet. The judges haven't wavered from the Bell v. Gannaway standard of mandatory, full compliance standard for any rejected absentee ballot envelopes that Coleman wants the court to open and count.
But then, when the 1975 Minnesota Supremes got to the question of what to do about Mabel, they reversed field (sort of). The Grey Cloud Island election judges should not have opened Mabel's ballot, but they did. Mr. Bell could have had an observer present who could have and should have insisted that the judges throw Mabel's ballot out. But he had no such poll watcher and missed his chance. Now Mabel's ballot is commingled with the other unflawed ballots. So, while acknowledging the awkwardness, the Bell majority wrote:
"...We are compelled to hold, as did the trial court, that contestant's challenge to this absentee ballot came too late."
In summary, the holding of Bell v. Gannaway is that absentee ballots should be held to an unforgiving high standard of compliance when the ballot is still in the envelope. Election judges should scrutinize the envelopes closely and the candidates should have poll-watchers on hand to make sure bad absentee ballots don't get counted. But once the ballot is removed from the envelope and commingled with the other ballots, you are stuck with it and cannot go back no matter what subsequent investigation might show about the inadequacy of the absentee voter application.
Late arguments
Over recent days, Team Coleman has often faced the criticism that he is raising his arguments too late. This is a big one. Judge Kurt Marben (one of the ThreeJudges hearing the contest) specifically asked Team Coleman why the court should not follow the Bell v. Gannaway precedent and rule that challenges to the acceptability of absentee ballots must be made before the ballot gets into the ballot box.
I mentioned above that Bell v. Gannaway was a split decision. Justice James Otis, with the agreement of Chief Justice Robert Sheran, wrote rather plainly:
"I cannot agree that a ballot which is characterized by the majority as 'clearly invaild' should determine the outome of an election (as it quite obviously does in this case), where the invalidity is the result of the voter herself flagrantly violating the law...Notwithstanding the fact that the rejection of the illegal ballot would result in a tie vote and that the election would then be decided by the toss of a coin, such procedure would at least give effect to the election laws, maintain the integrity of the ballot, and allow the controversy to be resolved in a democratic manner."
But the court majority disagreed and essentially made (or clarified) the law of the land for Minnesota on the question of what to do when improper absentee ballots have already been counted. Norm Coleman was still in law school when that case came down (he moved to Minnesota the following year). Now, 34 years later, this case out of Grey Cloud Island Township is a significant impediment to his return to the U.S. Senate.
More like this
- Must... stop... discussing... Bell v. Gannaway
- Ginsberg dings Bell, but did he dong it?
- Senate recount appeal: Update of previous breathless look at the Coleman brief
- In the Coleman-Franken contest, the three-judge court will now be tested
- Senate recount trial updates: 80 registration forms, ‘shrinking’ Coleman ballot universe and Bell case
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Comments (11)
Well written, as usual, Eric. I'm sending you a PDF of the case for you to post or otherwise make available.
Hooray. Finally some clarity.
Sure beats the character assasination and demogogary of those too hurt to admit Franken is the winner. Of course, if they care to continue to spread venom about "Dems trying to steal this election" check out the Brennan Center for Justice report on Voter Fraud - which they find rarely happens. Oh, too, bad some people who had just gotten tired of blaming the welfare moms in cadillacs and found new victim(s) like ACORN, Franken, etc. and will have to look elsewhere. But please, don't take my word for it, check out the Brennan report that chronicles efforts by a certain political party (I don't want to point a finger) who has passed onerous voter suppresssion and voter ID/registration laws in over 20 states. Norm and his ilk are now the defenders of voters rights? I don't think so. Just like "trickle down" these electoral mistruths are now uncovered. Just ask the 6 million more americans (i.e. the plurality in the Presidential election) who voted for hope, change and common sense...
Wonderful article, Eric! I had been very curious about what the explanation was concerning the legal precedent supporting the judges' decision not to revisit those 933 already agreed upon absentee ballots despite team Coleman's argument that the court had changed the standards after they were counted,in the Feb.13 ruling. So many other articles...so many opinions. But finally we have some real legal nuts and bolts to work with in understanding why team-hypocrite-Coleman's case is in well deserved shambles. Not to mention Kevin Hamilton's brilliant handling of witnesses, getting more mistakenly excluded ballots counted for Franken and showing at the same time that the mistakes were honest,non systemic,showed no bias,and are an extremely small percentage of the total of 2.9 million and that many of them had in fact been originally rejected by Coleman!
Dissenting Justice James Otis wrote ""I cannot agree that a ballot which is characterized by the majority as 'clearly invald'(sic) should determine the outome of an election (as it quite obviously does in this case),..."
I haven't read the case, but do we really know how Mabel voted, as Justice Otis implicitly claims. If not, perhaps Bell would have lost by two votes if Mabel's vote had not been counted.
This gets to the heart of Coleman's problem, I think. His lawyers have shown there to be problems in the election, but he has shown no evidence that he was not treated fairly as compared with Franken.
Think of it in the context of the votes cast the day of the election, A vote cast by an ineligible voter, whether in the wrong precinct, or otherwise improper, would not be thrown out once cast. The malefactor could be punished, the judge chastised, but the bell once rung cannot be unrung.
Mr. Coleman: What could be more poetically just than the decision made in Grey Cloud Township which now impacts your beleagured vote count. I guess your position that it should be obvious to all of us that the vote must be wrong--you lost--might not be based on fact. Be a man and give it up. Should there be your wished-for reelection, after all you've put us through, I can't imagine anything more appropriate than that you lose in a landslide.
Frank Bowden says:
"I haven't read the case, but do we really know how Mabel voted, as Justice Otis implicitly claims. If not, perhaps Bell would have lost by two votes if Mabel's vote had not been counted.
This gets to the heart of Coleman's problem, I think. His lawyers have shown there to be problems in the election, but he has shown no evidence that he was not treated fairly as compared with Franken."
*****
In the decision dissent (the PDF link is in the article), Justice Otis acknowledges this problem, laying out this rather astounding argument:
"I recognize that by excluding this invalid ballot the person to whom it was issued would be required to divulge the manner in which she cast her vote, if indeed she did vote. Nevertheless, she has forfeited her right to secrecy by willfully violating the law. If the question as to how she voted remains in doubt, competent evidence of her preelection position with respect to the candidates would, in all likelihood, be available to the parties."
He seems to say that this voter must somehow be compelled to confess who she voted for (maybe by waterboarding or something), and then when she has fessed up, the vote totals can be adjusted. (Or else, if she doesn't confess, that who she voted for can be surmised, somehow, and based on that her vote can be removed from the tally.)
This is a pretty wacky and amazing opinion. I suppose it could be a remedy in this tiny town's election (it may be that Mabel's last name is Gannaway), but that remedy could never be applied to Franken v. Coleman. Also, in the Bell case, there is the argument that Mabel willfully cheated, but in the current Senatorial case the absentee voters whose votes were opened in error were not trying to cheat, but were administrative errors on the part of the election officials.
Of course, in 1975 the Equal Protection can of worms that SCOTUS opened up in 2000 wasn't around to further confuse things.
This was a wonderful blog post, Eric. Thanks for the clarification of this precedent.
One wonders how much the Koch brothers would be willing to pay Minnesota voters to say "I voted
for Franken, but did so improperly, so my vote should be removed from his pile."
This scenario is not explicit in Bell v. Gannaway, but was much discussed at the time.
btw, the Koch family owns the "Flint Hills" refinery at Pine Bend - not very far from Grey Cloud Island. The clan patriarch was a founder of the John Birch Society. Their contributions to our nation's welfare have continued down that slope all these years.
Very interesting, nice piece of work. This is not too important, but regarding the dissenting opinion you reference, I unlike the judge, would prefer to not confuse democracy with randomness.
Any large election will inevitably result in a few problems - a result of simply human error. When you factor in that elections are infrequent but immense logistical accomplishments, no one should be surprised at the errors and indeed, should marvel at how few there are.
The thing with error is that it is compounded by a few factors such as outdated equipment and high numbers of newly registered voters. Time and again, those factors have been shown to actually increase the error and disqualification rate of Democratic votes - not Republican votes - one reason why statisticians anticipated that the recount would put Franken in the lead.
It is then extraordinarily disingenuous for Coleman to argue that the errors harmed him - it flies in the face of statistics and decades of ballot recount experience.
I just viewed Mr. Black's interview on Jim Leher's News hour regarding ballot dispute.
I was an absentee ballot voter.....and I take issue that Minnesotans are not upset that they are only being represented by one senator while this debacle gets sorted out. I, for one, am mad as hell that I lack that representation.
I would gladly recreate my ballot if asked to in order to expedite this matter, but to communicate on a national stage that Minnesotans are not reeling about this is flat out wrong.