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Murkowski attorney Ben Ginbserg countered that case law makes clear this is a state that heavily favors voter intent. Miller has filed a federal lawsuit, seeking to bar the state from counting ballots that do not meet the standards set out in law. Briefings in the matter are set for next week. The case law that state officials and Ginsberg point to does not refer to a write-in campaign but to the marking of ballot ovals, and it gives weight to voter intent. Edward Foley, an election law scholar and law professor at Ohio State University, sees where a valid argument could be made by either side. "I can see a judge easily saying there's no wiggle room under the statute or there's a little wiggle room but not a lot," he said. Some courts in election matters have taken a "tough luck," rules-are-rules approach, he said, while others have proved more lenient to keep voters from being disenfranchised. Also Thursday, a strategist for Miller, Floyd Brown, raised the specter of voter fraud and intimidation but offered little proof of this, prompting Murkowski campaign manager Kevin Sweeney to cast it as "desperation" in the face of current numbers. More than 92,900 write-in ballots have been cast in the race, with thousands of absentee and questioned ballots still coming in or yet to be addressed. Write-ins led Miller by a margin of 10,799 as of Wednesday night. The write-in count could extend into the weekend.
[Associated
Press;
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