Supreme Court rules against Miller appeal

witness23

Veteran Expediter
Palin and the teaparty backed this jackwagon? What an embarrasment this guy is. Let it go dude, they didn't elect you and you got beat by a "Write-In" candidate. That alone should've been enough for you to walk away with some dignity.

From the story:
"Voter intent is paramount and any misspelling, abbreviation or other minor variation ...does not invalidate a ballot so long as the intention of the voter can be ascertained," the Supreme Court said in its ruling.

It's scary this guy was almost elected in the first place. He is already going against the "intent" of the Alaskan people.

NEXT STEP: State presses judge to lift block on election certification.

Link: Supreme Court rules against Miller appeal: 2010 Alaska U.S. Senate election | adn.com


The Alaska Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled unanimously on all counts against Joe Miller's challenge of last month's U.S. Senate election, saying Miller's interpretation of the law would erode the integrity of Alaska's election system.


"There are no remaining issues raised by Miller that prevent this election from being certified," the Supreme Court justices declared in their 24-page ruling.

The court ruled the state was right to count misspelled write-in ballots for Sen. Lisa Murkowki. The justices also found Miller hasn't proved his allegations of election fraud.

Murkowski leads by more than 10,000 votes and Miller is fast running out of legal options. He still has a chance to quickly press his claim in federal court.

U.S. District Court Judge Ralph Beistline is giving Miller until Monday morning to argue that the federal courts should take up any remaining constitutional issues. Beistline has blocked the state from certifying Murkowski as the winner of the Senate race while the court issues are being settled.

The state is asking Beistline to lift his block and he's promised to decide "as soon as possible."

Miller didn't agree to an interview after the Supreme Court ruling but e-mailed a statement saying he was weighing what his next move will be.

"We disagree with the court's interpretation of the election code, but respect both the rule of law and the court's place in the judicial system," Miller said. "We are studying the opinion and carefully considering our options."

Miller has been challenging the results of the Nov. 2 election with the help of money from South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint's political action committee, the Senate Conservatives Fund. Miller's campaign spokesman has said they might attempt to take the fight all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Murkowski campaign manager Kevin Sweeney said he was elated by the Supreme Court ruling and expects Beistline will let the election results be certified next week. "We also anticipate that Joe will continue to pursue his baseless claims in federal court until his money runs out," Sweeney said.

50 YEARS OF CASE LAW


The Supreme Court ruled that state Superior Court Judge William Carey of Ketchikan was right to toss out Miller's lawsuit over the U.S. Senate race. "We affirm the decision of the superior court in all respects," the justices wrote in their ruling.

Miller's central claim was that the Division of Elections shouldn't have counted write-in ballots for Murkowski if her name was misspelled. The incumbent Murkowski launched her write-in campaign after losing in the Aug. 24 Republican primary to Miller, who ran on a tea party platform with the backing of former Gov. Sarah Palin.

The Supreme Court said it was relying on 50 years of rulings that emphasized the principle of following voter intent in deciding Alaska's elections.

"Voter intent is paramount and any misspelling, abbreviation or other minor variation ...does not invalidate a ballot so long as the intention of the voter can be ascertained," the Supreme Court said in its ruling.

The court said Alaskans who don't speak English as a first language or have learning disabilities still deserve to have their votes count. The court also said federal law explicitly allows misspellings for write-in ballots cast by overseas or military voters.

"Miller's proposed construction of the statute would require us to impose a different, and more rigorous, voting standard on domestic Alaskans than those who are serving in the military or living abroad," the justices said.

Miller argued that Alaska law doesn't allow the state elections director to decide what candidate a voter intended to support when a misspelling occurs.

The Legislature awkwardly phrased the law in dispute. The law says "a vote for a write-in candidate ... shall be counted if the oval is filled in for that candidate and if the name, as it appears on the write-in declaration of candidacy, of the candidate or the last name of the candidate is written in the space provided."

The state Supreme Court ruled that language needs to be taken in the context of broader Alaska election law, which the justices said is written to ensure that votes are counted and not excluded. The justices said Miller had wrongfully argued that only his interpretation of the law would preserve the integrity of the election.

"It is Miller's interpretation of the statute that would erode the integrity of the election system, because it would result in disenfranchisement of some voters and ultimately rejection of election results that constitute the will of the people," the court ruled. "We have consistently construed election statutes in favor of voter enfranchisement."

MILLER DOESN'T PROVE FRAUD


Even if the Supreme Court had tossed out every ballot challenged by Miller's ballot observers, Murkowski still would win by more than 2,000 votes. And Miller's lawyers have acknowledged that some of those challenges were wrong.

But Miller also claimed election irregularities that he hoped would take other votes from Murkowski. The Supreme Court shot him down on those claims as well.

Miller wanted more time to prove his allegations. But the justices wrote that "pure speculation cannot support a fishing expedition for evidence to oppose summary judgment in an election contest."

One of Miller's claims stated that some Murkowski write-in ballots appeared to have all been written in the same handwriting. The Supreme Court ruled that doesn't mean there was fraud. The justices noted Alaska law lets voters ask elections workers for assistance in voting, including writing the name of a write-in candidate.

"No reasonable inference of misconduct can arise from the mere fact that the handwriting on multiple ballots appears to be from a small number of people," the court ruled.

Miller also alleged that more than 5,000 votes were suspect because election workers didn't check a box specifying how they'd verified voter identification. But the court said there is no actual requirement that election workers fill in those boxes.

Miller's latest claim was that an unknown number of felons voted who shouldn't have. The state said only felons who had their voting rights reinstated had voted.

Miller made the claim after his lawsuit was already filed and the courts have declined to wade into the issue. The Supreme Court justices left it up to Superior Court Judge Carey to decide if he wanted to let Miller try to prove it. But they said the election results still could be certified if that issue is pending.

PUSH FOR CERTIFICATION


Lt. Gov. Mead Treadwell said he wasn't too worried about this claim. "There is no evidence that there was any inappropriate activity there," Treadwell said Wednesday.

Treadwell said he's hoping the election will be certified between Christmas and New Year's. He said the federal courts need to let the state certify the election before the new U.S. Senate is sworn in Jan. 5. Federal Judge Beistline has agreed that's important and said Miller could still pursue legal claims even after it is certified.

Rick Hasen, an election law expert at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, looked over Wednesday's Alaska's Supreme Court ruling. "At this point, a rational politician hoping for a future in Alaska politics would throw in the towel rather than contesting these results in federal court, in state court after certification, or in the U.S. Senate," he concluded.

Murkowski tried to make her lead even bigger by arguing that the state should have counted about 1,500 ballots where voters wrote in her name but didn't fill in the oval next to it.

The Supreme Court considered that along with Miller's lawsuit and ruled the state was right not to count those additional ballots for Murkowski.
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
Murkowski did a great job with her campaign, I think she pulled it off and the system worked as the tea party wanted it to work everywhere else so I say live with it.

To the tea party - next time get your ducks in order, learn how to run an effective campaign (maybe take some lessons from Murkowski) and don't be a cry baby if you lose.
 

xiggi

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
Although I agree it is time for him to walk away, the argument most people are using that he lost and the people spoke is rather ironic. The same thing could have been said about her and her write in campaign, she lost the primary and didn't find a need to "let it go".
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
I agree to a point.

Her losing the primary was meaningless because that vote wasn't binding.

Her write in campaign was a great example of our election system which allowed her to actually run in an election that she felt she should be able to.

It is how the system is to work, it is the foundation of the entire system in a form of protection of the vote. It protects the system from control of any one group and in this case is one of the best examples you could ever ask for.
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
I also agree. the thing that gets me is the problem with unity within the party and why the tea party isn't practicing what they been preaching. This is one of a few issues, and many believe that they, the tea party, has taken the country by storm and actually done something where I see it as we fired the democrats this year like we fired the republicans in 2006.
 

muttly

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Murkowski did a great job with her campaign, I think she pulled it off and the system worked as the tea party wanted it to work everywhere else so I say live with it.

To the tea party - next time get your ducks in order, learn how to run an effective campaign (maybe take some lessons from Murkowski) and don't be a cry baby if you lose.

Get your ducks in order and run an effective campaign? Not accurate statements. They took a relative unknown person in Alaska with conservative principles and WON the republican primary. He would have won the general if Murkowski didn't go back on her word about backing the winner of the primary. She split the republican vote and now Alaska has a RINO again as senator.
 

muttly

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Joe Miller is not a jackwagon as someone has called him,but Lebron is undoubtly a QUITTER.:D
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
Get your ducks in order and run an effective campaign? Not accurate statements. They took a relative unknown person in Alaska with conservative principles and WON the republican primary. He would have won the general if Murkowski didn't go back on her word about backing the winner of the primary. She split the republican vote and now Alaska has a RINO again as senator.

I don't see it that way at all. I see that any promise is not a promise when it comes from a politician, especially during any election cycle.

Too bad she 'went back on her word', her word is worthless anyway but her effectiveness in campaigning, even against the primary winner was something that they can take lessons on.
 

witness23

Veteran Expediter
Joe Miller is not a jackwagon as someone has called him,but Lebron is undoubtly a QUITTER.:D

We agree on that one, LeBron is a quitter. If you are looking for me to defend him, you are sorely mistaken. I also know of another quitter, who happened to came out of Alaska and is partly to blame for this jackwagon Miller, Mrs. Palin. Since you don't like quitter's like LeBron, you must have the same opinion of Mrs. Palin as you do of LeBron. I hate quitters like LeBron and Palin.
 

Black Sheep

Expert Expediter
Miller's campaign was doing fine until this somewhat minor ethics violation came to light late in the campaign. Once the press and the Murkowski group got wind of that deal, it was too late for him to recover. Had the Alaskan GOP known about this skeleton in the first place, they would probably have found a different candidate for the primary. It was a minor violation that got blown up when he tried to cover it by lying - not too smart.

Joe Miller: 'I Lied' About Accessing Computers For Political Purposes
 

muttly

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
We agree on that one, LeBron is a quitter. If you are looking for me to defend him, you are sorely mistaken. I also know of another quitter, who happened to came out of Alaska and is partly to blame for this jackwagon Miller, Mrs. Palin. Since you don't like quitter's like LeBron, you must have the same opinion of Mrs. Palin as you do of LeBron. I hate quitters like LeBron and Palin.

And surely you must have the same opinion of the jackwagon quitter Obama as well right?
 

witness23

Veteran Expediter
And surely you must have the same opinion of the jackwagon quitter Obama as well right?

Of course he quit 4 years into a 6 year term, he resigned to get elected to a higher post. Which is customary among politicians when seeking higher positions, such as, I don't know......the Presidency.

If you are trying to equate this to Palin stepping down, there really is no comparison. Obama did it because he got elected to a more important chair. Palin simply stepped down, to no other position. She hasn't announced that she's a candidate for anything within the Government, let alone the Presidency. If she comes out before the 2012 election and say's she is running for President or Vice President, then I will have to look at her decision of quitting diffently. Until then, she is a quitter.
 

jaminjim

Veteran Expediter
Of course he quit 4 years into a 6 year term, he resigned to get elected to a higher post. Which is customary among politicians when seeking higher positions, such as, I don't know......the Presidency.

If you are trying to equate this to Palin stepping down, there really is no comparison. Obama did it because he got elected to a more important chair. Palin simply stepped down, to no other position. She hasn't announced that she's a candidate for anything within the Government, let alone the Presidency. If she comes out before the 2012 election and say's she is running for President or Vice President, then I will have to look at her decision of quitting diffently. Until then, she is a quitter.

Your infatuation of Obama and and your dislike of Palin seems to cloud your every post.
 

hdxpedx

Veteran Expediter
Fleet Owner
to look at her decision of quitting diffently. Until then, she is a quitter.[/QUOTE]

US
Bristol Palin Pays $172,000 in Cash for Arizona Home
I remember watching the beady-eye lib from ALASKA, grinning as she could file against the sitting governor PALIN to respond and pay legal fee’s to all the constant grievances she repeatedly filed! At that time Palin was in the $500,000 debt to legal fees, because for the constant lib filings- Then PALIN resigned and overnight became RICH!! Talk about kicking sand in someone's face.
 

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
hdx posted:

Bristol Palin Pays $172,000 in Cash for Arizona Home

Ahhh Bristol is not Sarah...and I think Bristol took a bit more then "$200,000 in cash from her recent (while it be a joke) "Dancing with the stars" trip...
 

witness23

Veteran Expediter
Your infatuation of Obama and and your dislike of Palin seems to cloud your every post.

Infatuation with Obama? Okay, if you think so. Dislike of Palin, yep. Clouding my every post? Okay, if you think so.

Do you think Palin quit? What's your take on her decision?
 

jaminjim

Veteran Expediter
Infatuation with Obama? Okay, if you think so. Dislike of Palin, yep. Clouding my every post? Okay, if you think so.

Do you think Palin quit? What's your take on her decision?

Yes I think you are infatuated with Obama, My comment was more about your thoughts that Obama didn't quit, and Palin did. Obama 'quit' in 2007.
 

witness23

Veteran Expediter
Yes I think you are infatuated with Obama,

Hey, you are entitled to your opinion.

My comment was more about your thoughts that Obama didn't quit, and Palin did. Obama 'quit' in 2007

I did say he quit. You even quoted me. sheesh! There is a difference though, in my opinion.

Originally Posted by witness23:
Of course he quit 4 years into a 6 year term, he resigned to get elected to a higher post.

Try reading my post, that you quoted, again and tell me why Palin didn't quit. If you don't see a difference that's fine, I'm not trying to change your mind, but it will say a lot about the kind of person you are. There is no comparison of Palin and Obama.
 

jaminjim

Veteran Expediter
Hey, you are entitled to your opinion.



I did say he quit. You even quoted me. sheesh! There is a difference though, in my opinion.
Well you tried softening by adding that he resigned. She is doing more than most to galvanize the American public.


Try reading my post, that you quoted, again and tell me why Palin didn't quit.
I'm going to take a stab at it and say she also resigned, and is helping to reshape the political landscape.
If you don't see a difference that's fine, I'm not trying to change your mind, but it will say a lot about the kind of person you are. What would it say? There is no comparison of Palin and Obama.
You are absolutely correct that they are not the same.
 
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