Politics | Lisa Murkowski All Votes for Murkowski Go Through One Woman Gail Fenumiai oversees unprecedented election By Nick McMaster Posted Nov 15, 2010 8:24 PM CST Copied Alaska Elections Division Director Gail Fenumiai, right, and Assistant Attorney General Sarah Felix look over a ballot Wednesday, Nov. 10, 2010, in Juneau, Alaska. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) With 98,500 write-in votes cast in the Alaska Senate race, the contest is being decided through the actions of one woman: Gail Fenumiai, the director of Alaska's Division of Elections. Fenumiai has been personally overseeing the unprecedented count, in which write-in ballots—some with significantly mutilated spellings of Murkowski's name—are declared legitimate or discarded, NPR reports. A typical day in Fenumiai's operation sees her perform her court-ordered duty: of write-ins casting a ballot for "Lisa Murcouski," "Lisa Murkowksi," "Lisa Murizowski" and "Lisa Mikawski," she counts the first pair and disqualifies the second. But her accepted misspellings may be later disqualified by a judge. Alaska's lieutenant governor says he had the "utmost confidence" in Fenumiai's competence and integrity. "She takes it seriously," he said. "She's proving she has what it takes." Read These Next Kid Rock has added the R-word to the list of slurs he still uses. Man wakes from coma, says girlfriend crashed car on purpose. Jodi Picoult says she's first author to be banned in two mediums. Andrew Windsor has an uncertain future as a commoner. Report an error