From what I've read the Minnesota law under which Franken challenged contemplates eventual decision by the Senate itself (don't ask me why), which would of course favor him. Before that there's the bipartisan inspection & recount phase (a three-man panel with one guy from each side and one neutral), however, and if it shows everything to be above board, he probably wouldn't bother taking this any further than that.
(Boy, it feels so odd to have my vote actually matter this much for once, just a 725-ballot spread in one of three races deciding the ability to filibuster...)
(Boy, it feels so odd to have my vote actually matter this much for once, just a 725-ballot spread in one of three races deciding the ability to filibuster...)
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