Al on the Late Show with David Letterman discussing his candidacy for the US Senate, issues facing voters in Minnesota, and good rules for anyone calling home.
Norm Coleman says that even knowing then what he knows now, he still would have supported the war in Iraq. Our new web video shows that he's still wrong.
Al on the Late Show with David Letterman discussing his candidacy for the US Senate, issues facing voters in Minnesota, education, and his fourth-grade teacher.
Harry Truman drove around the country in his Dodge to root out war profiteering.
Norm Coleman compared his oversight record to Harry Truman's, but didn't hold a single hearing into war profiteering in Iraq.
Norm dodged his responsibility -- and now he's desperate to dodge blame.
In a powerful new television spot intended to help Minnesotans get to know the real Al Franken, his wife Franni reveals her struggle with alcohol dependency and talks about Al's work to support her and others in the same situation.
Al's wife Franni and daughter Thomasin introduce him as part of their launch of Women for Franken with a video for the website of the group, alfranken.com/women.
Al Franken for Senate held a rally at the Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul to announcement major new endorsements - and Al outlined his agenda to change the direction of our country on issues like health care, the economy, educations, veterans issues, and the war in Iraq.
Al spent a week touring the living rooms of middle-class Minnesotans, meeting with neighbors and hearing story after story about an economy that isn't working for them.
Meet some of Norm Coleman's fishing buddies: powerful lobbyists, corporate special interests, corrupt oil executives, and indicted Alaska Senator Ted Stevens.
In the closest Senate race in Minnesota history, every vote should be counted fairly.
But there are Minnesotans who had their votes thrown out, even though they did nothing wrong.
They voted absentee, but their ballots were improperly rejected because of someone elses mistake.
And in the closest Senate race in Minnesota history, their votes remain uncounted.
Al Franken lays out his plans to help the middle class: stop giveaways to big oil and drug companies, bring real oversight to Wall Street, make college affordable, and get the economy moving again.
Minnesotans know that Norm Coleman isn't working for them in Washington. This ad is the latest in our series exploring just who he is working for -- and what he's getting in return.