By Nicole Russell on 2.17.09 @ 6:07AM
Mr. Franken goes to Washington, to Florida, and pretty much
everywhere else except Minnesota as a Senate seat hangs in the
balance.
As the recount trial for Senator Norm Coleman and Al Franken
heads into its fourth week, a few things are becoming clear: Al
Franken doesn't have the bearing of a U.S. senator -- and he may
not have the votes to become one either.
On Election Day, the Minnesota Senate race was in a dead heat.
After a baffling and flawed recount which showed Al Franken ahead
by a mere 225 votes, Senator Coleman and his team of legal
experts brought the case to court. The Coleman camp must prove
there were errors during the recount process. Franken must prove
Coleman agreed to the vote-counting procedures during the recount
and now must live with the consequences. Almost every day, the
Coleman team makes progress in showing Franken may have declared
victory too soon. On February 5, Anoka Country announced it
discovered ballots that had never even been counted.
Last week, a Dakota county official testified some absentee
ballots were wrongly rejected. The list goes on.
One would think, given the progress of the trial, Franken would
start acting more like a senator, not less, if only to look good
in front of his would-be constituents. No such luck. When it
appeared he was the winner, the eager comedian declared victory
but took no questions from reporters. This disappearance from the
media might have made more sense coming from Coleman, the
apparent loser. Coming from the man who claimed to be
senator-elect, it was inexplicable.
Franken jetted to Florida to enjoy a two-week vacation amid the
sun and turf, while Minnesotans endured yet another biting cold
winter. Perhaps Franken will start a new trend -- "Snowbirds for
Senate" -- and he and other Democratic senators from the chilly
Midwest can draw up bills and communicate with their constituents
from West Palm Beach.
Yet Franken may be starting to feel the chill from his erstwhile
allies in the local media. Esme Murphy, a reporter for the news
channel WCCO and no right-winger, seemed genuinely annoyed he was
blowing her and her colleagues off. She blogged
she was "desperately seeking Al" and complained that he was
soaking in the sun while people like her "have been freezing
their butts off." She demanded, tongue in cheek: "I want to know,
Al, what you are thinking. Norm Coleman has been around attending
the trial, giving his opinions on anything people have asked him.
I know because Coleman has gotten quite a bit of flak over an
interview he did with me on Sunday. But at least he is out there,
and I do think at this critical time people want to hear from the
person who could be our next senator."
Maybe the media blackout is intentional, even as the election
result hangs in limbo. Murphy asked one of Franken's staffers if
they could sit down for a post-election chat. The staffer
replied, "I think we are going to be putting Al back in the box
for now."
The staffer's remark is as telling as it is humorous. Coleman for
Senate spokesman Mark Drake thinks Franken's inaccessibility
reflects the Democrat's indifference as much as a conscious
strategy. After all, he has a tendency to be caught on tape
behaving inappropriately. "Team Franken is obviously very
concerned about how he is going to come across or what he's going
to say. That's why they're keeping him 'in the box.'"
Though Murphy later added an update that Franken had given two
interviews in the last week and a half, they were interviews with
local Minnesota press in Washington, D.C. while Franken attended
the inauguration. Not local interviews in Minnesota, where he
would be in full view of his beloved constituents.
This is in stark contrast to Senator Coleman. Since the election,
recount, and during the trial, he has been accessible and
visible; he has granted interviews and attended the trial. In
other words, he has behaved like someone running for the U.S.
Senate -- and with the deportment of someone who would serve
there.
In an interview with local political reporter, Tom Hauser,
Coleman said, "Bottom line, let's count every validly cast vote.
Figure out who the winner is, if it's me I go back to work, if
it's Al Franken, he becomes a senator. I think Minnesotans
deserve to get it right, I think we need to get it right."
Unfortunately, Al Franken doesn't see the need to get it right
before a winner is crowned. Despite a full trial proceeding going
on testing the results of the recount he thinks he won, he had
the
audacity to ask the Minnesota court to put him in the Senate
before the outcome of the trial was determined -- while getting a
tan in Florida. His request was dismissed, but not before another
round of raspberries from the press.
Still, as of this writing, Franken has not attended the trial and
mentioned in an
interview last week that he "occasionally checks an online
trial feed supplied by the UpTake [a liberal citizens news blog
in Minnesota]" and finds it "entertaining."
The only comic relief everyone may find is the result of this
trial, which may still turn in Coleman's favor. If it doesn't,
Minnesotans may tire of a senator who is more interested in
entertainment than statesmanship.
topics:
Al Franken