Democratic Socialist Robin Wonsley Worlobah was once again declared the winner in the race to represent the Second Ward on the Minneapolis City Council after the completion of a recount Wednesday.
An attorney for runner-up Yusra Arab, the DFL candidate who requested the recount, said they are now considering whether to file a legal action contesting the election.
Nearly 9,800 votes were cast in the race and the latest tally has the top two candidates just 13 votes apart. Just over 60 absentee ballots were rejected, and candidates can receive only limited information about them, unless they go to court.
"It's a real tough one," said Brian Rice, Arab's attorney.
Davis Senseman, an attorney for Wonsley Worlobah, said they're confident in her status as the winner.
"I think as far as we're concerned, as far as Robin is concerned, we're done," Senseman said. "She'll be sworn in, in January. She's been participating in orientation. We knew going into it that Minneapolis elections officials do a remarkable job. The recount and the canvass pointed all that out."
A total of 63 absentee ballots were rejected. Wonsley Worlobah's campaign said they received information from elections officials Wednesday afternoon that showed the following: Of those 63 ballots, two were submitted by the same person. Seventeen people ultimately succeeded in voting another way, likely by submitting a corrected ballot or voting in person at the polls. Of the remaining ballots, 32 were rejected because they arrived late, and 13 were rejected for other unspecified reasons.
Rice said Wednesday night that he was working to review the new data. He said earlier in the day that they believe about 25 of the rejected ballots might have been submitted by people of East African heritage, based on their last names.