Georgia Runoff?
Minnesota Recount
I can't find a good source for Oregon, but according to the NY Times numbers the Dems are down 0.7% with 30% of the vote outstanding.
Alaska Senate Race: Ted Stevens Election Likely Despite Convictions
by Steven Kane
Alaska Senator Ted Stevens, who was found guilty of seven felonies seemingly just days before the election, looks to be headed back to the Senate thanks to Alaskan voters.
The 84-year old, once honored as the "Alaskan of the Century", has been in the Senate for 40 years and now has a 4,000 vote margin over Democrat Mark Begich, the mayor of Anchorage, which equates to two percentage points.
The tally is by no means complete as the state must still count about 40,000 absentee ballots and another 9,000 uncounted early votes and possibly the addition of thousands of other provisional ballots that have yet to be certified as being from qualified voters. The count does not have to be finalized by the state Elections Division for 15 days and it looks like they will use up that entire time.
Recent polls in the race showed the incumbent down by up to 8 percentage points and now it looks like he will instead become the only Senator in history to be sent back to the U.S. Senate after being found guilty of criminal charges.
Stevens has elected to appeal the judgements against him and maintains his innocence while the governor of Alaska, now former Vice-Presidential candidate Sarah Palin, has said that she believes Stevens should step down. Even Mitch McConnell, who also won his re-election bid, has said that there is "zero chance that a senator with a felony conviction would not be expelled from the Senate."
If both the conviction and Stevens's lead in the polls hold up, once the Senator re-signs or is expelled by a two-thirds vote, a special election would be held to fill the seat.
ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia's U.S. Senate race could be headed for a runoff.
With thousands of absentee ballots still being counted, Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss has fallen below 50 percent mark.
Chambliss needs 50 percent-plus-one of the votes to avoid a runoff. The Associated Press shows him with 49.8 percent of the vote. Democratic challenger Jim Martin has 46.8 percent. Libertarian Allen Buckley is pulling 3.4 percent.
Martin is preparing for a runoff. He'll host a news conference later this morning to outline his plans.
The Chambliss camp said they're still studying the returns. They planned their own news conference to respond.
Is there any chance left the Democrats get a supermajority? I think the biggest stumbling block at this point is Alaska.Coleman claims victory; automatic recount likely next step
Sen. Norm Coleman said today that he has won reelection for a second term from Minnesota, and urged Democratic challenger Al Franken to abandon any pursuit of a recount.
By KEVIN DUCHSCHERE and PAUL WALSHAND CURT BROWN, Star Tribune staff writers
Sen. Norm Coleman late this morning declared victory for a second term from Minnesota, even as the wheels are churning toward an automatic recount of the nearly 3 million votes cast in his battle with Democrat Al Franken.
The Republican, whose margin in the unofficial state tally stands at 725 votes, said from his headquarters in St. Paul that he is "humbled and grateful for the victory that the voters gave us last night."
He then said Franken should abandon any pursuit of a recount, saying that "the prospect of overturning 725 votes is extremely, extremely, extremely remote." Franken could request that there not be a recount, but there is no hint that he would make such a move.
As for the recount itself, Secretary of State Mark Ritchie said he expects "several weeks" to pass before it is complete.
Coleman's declaration was met with applause from his family, standing to his right, and the supporters before him. His campaign website stamped his comments as visitors are met with the word "VICTORY" standing tall with an American flag in the background.
Coleman went on to praise the state for its reputation of running clean elections. He also noted Franken's right to seek a recount, but added that "I would step back" if he were similarly trailing.
Speaking afterward on behalf of Franken, Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak scolded Coleman for his embrace of victory, telling KSTP-TV that "we won't know what Minnesotans wanted" until the recount is complete. "There's a law here; we follow the law," Rybak said.
Meanwhile, the campaign of Franken is starting the process of compiling reports of voting irregularities, as Minnesota officials today prepared for the painstaking process of recounting ballots.