As Coleman continues the stall, it's time to give this guy and his Republican backers the schtup!
Today Norm Coleman took his lost election complaint to the Minnesota Supreme Court. This was after the last court loss and the appeal loss and the recount loss to Al Franken. Now it will be at least June before there is a decision and then he is likely to take it to the US Supreme Court and stall some more.
Maybe it's time to go along with the Progressive Change Campaign Committee (PCCC) whose petition most of us have already signed, and the program they have put together with Howard Dean's organization (Democracy For America): "A dollar a day to make Norm go away."
Here's what Chris Matthews had to say about it:
Good idea, no? If they are going to keep up the stall then it is time to raise money so they lose even more Congressional positions in the future (maybe we can help Minnesota replace the Congressional class clown Michele Bachmann... among so many others.)
Go to the Dollar A Day Campaign Page and sign up.
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UPDATE:
This is the e-mail I sent to Coleman's campaign site after Jim Tedisco conceded New York when everyone thought his approximate 400 vote loss was going to trigger a Colemanesque stall:
Hey, Norm, It's time to be as big a man as Jim Tedisco and call it a day. The whole world is aware of what you are doing... that you are stalling to keep Senator-elect Franken from taking his seat and giving Minnesotans what they voted for and what the review of the recount proved.
Why do you want to make your own reputation that of a 3d rate schmuck?
Let the people of Minnesota have what Jim Tedisco has allowed the people of New York - complete and full representation of their needs in Congress.
Of course, you have a great future ahead of you as a major fundraising icon for people pledging $1.00 a day until you drop the crap and pull out. There is already close to $40,000.00 dollars you've helped raise to campaign against Republicans in 2010. The rest of the Party is going to LOVE you.
- Bill Tchakirides at
Under The LobsterScope (http://underthelobsterscope.blogspot.com)