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Promote the Vote asks Michigan Supreme Court to have voter rights initiative placed on November ballot

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The advocacy group Promote the Vote has filed a motion to have the Michigan Supreme Court instruct the Board of Canvassers to place a ballot initiative to expand voter rights in the state onto the November General Election ballot.

The petition was filed Wednesday, one day after the Board of Canvassers deadlocked on the issue, meaning it was rejected.

Republicans Tony Daunt and and Richard Houskamp voted against certifying the proposal while Democrats Mary Ellen Gurewitz and Jeannette Bradshaw voted for certifying the proposal.

One group, Defend Your Vote, challenge the petition saying that it failed to include all of the constitutional challenges that would be abrogated by the proposed amendments to the Michigan Constitution.

According to the Bureau of Elections report, the petition did include the language and listed sections altered or abrogated, and that other parts of the challenge would raise legal arguments that needed to be decided by the court.

Daunt and Houskamp urged the board to take the challenges seriously.

On the other hand, Bradshaw and Gurewitz said that it wasn't up to the board to make the decision and instead their job was just to certify the signatures.

The motion to the state Supreme Court asks the court to find that the petition has met all of the qualifications necessary to be approved by the Board of Canvassers and then instruct the board to place the measure on the ballot. It also asks the court to decide the matter by September 8, which would allow the matter to be placed on the ballot ahead of the deadline to begin printing them.

The proposal would make changes that would make it easier for people to vote. Those changes include adding more absentee ballot drop boxes and putting pre-paid postage on absentee applications and envelopes, providing nine days of early in-person voting, allow Michiganders voting in military to have their ballot counted if postmarked by election day and more.

According to the Bureau of Election reports, after the sampling, the total number of potentially valid signatures would be 630,415, which was above the required 425,059 signatures to get on the ballot.

The proposed 100-word summary for the proposal would be:

"Proposal 22-2

A proposal to authorize additional absentee voting provisions, early in-person voting, and donations to fund elections; and add current legal requirements for voter identification and post-election audits and canvasses to the Michigan Constitution

This proposed constitutional amendment would:

  • Recognize fundamental right to vote without harassing conduct;
  • Require military or overseas ballots be counted if postmarked by election day;
  • Provide voter right to verify identity with photo ID or signed statement;
  • Provide voter right to single application to vote absentee in all elections;
  • Require state-funded absentee-ballot drop boxes, and postage for absentee applications and ballots;
  • Provide that only election officials may conduct post-election audits;
  • Require 9 days of early in-person voting; • Allow donations to fund elections, which must be disclosed;
  • Require canvass boards certify election results based only on the official records of votes cast.

Should this proposal be adopted?

[ ] YES [ ] NO"

After the vote was deadlocked, the board did vote 4-0 to designate the Promote the Vote as Proposal 2 on the November ballot if the Supreme Court votes to certify the proposal.

Read the appeal below: