Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2 ineligible for ballot in Michigan

Republican hopefuls for governor vow to take fight to court

- SARA BURNETT

Two of the leading candidates for the GOP nomination for Michigan governor say they will ask the courts to intervene after they were found ineligible Thursday for the August primary, which could reshape the race to challenge Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in the battlegrou­nd state this fall.

Former Detroit Police Chief James Craig, who has led in most primary polls, and businessma­n Perry Johnson, along with three other lesser-known candidates, did not qualify for the ballot. The state elections bureau recommende­d they be disqualifi­ed, saying it found thousands of fraudulent signatures on petitions submitted by the candidates. The vote by the bipartisan Board of State Canvassers was 2-2, with two Democrats supporting the recommenda­tion and two Republican­s saying the candidates should get on the ballot.

A tie vote means the candidates lost.

Craig criticized the board’s partisan decision as “a travesty” and said the bureau should have done a line-by-line verificati­on of signatures he submitted, rather than rejecting entire pages based on its findings of fraud. He said the campaign will file an “immediate appeal.”

“We are confident that when the law is justly applied, our campaign will be on the ballot this August,” Craig said.

Johnson has already spent millions of his personal fortune on the contest. Attorney Jason Torchinsky said the state’s process had “fatal flaws that didn’t follow election law” and that he’s confident Johnson will be on the ballot after the court review.

The other lesser-known GOP candidates — Donna Brandenbur­g, Michael Brown and Michael Markey — also were found ineligible after elections staff said they, too, didn’t turn in enough valid signatures. Brown withdrew from the race on Tuesday.

Democrats challenged the GOP candidates’ petitions, alleging mass forgery and other issues. Another Republican candidate, Tudor Dixon, had also contested Craig’s voter signatures as fake. But the bureau, which is part of Democratic Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson’s department, said it discovered the fraud in its own review and didn’t process the challenges filed by the Michigan Democratic Party and Dixon.

Candidates for governor were required to submit valid signatures from 15,000 registered voters to make the ballot. In a report released late Monday, bureau staff said multiple petition sheets for various candidates “displayed suspicious patterns indicative of fraud.” Some of the petitions for Craig’s campaign, for example, had signatures that all appeared to be written in the same handwritin­g.

Staff said that while it’s typical for petitions to include scattered instances of dubious signatures, “the Bureau is unaware of another election cycle” with such a “substantia­l volume” of fraudulent signatures involving multiple candidates. They identified 36 petition circulator­s — who are often paid per signature gathered — who submitted petition sheets made up entirely of invalid signatures.

The Republican­s who remain on the ballot are Dixon, who recently was endorsed by the family of former Trump administra­tion Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, real estate agent Ryan Kelley, businessma­n Kevin Rinke, pastor Ralph Rebandt and chiropract­or Garrett Soldano.

The bureau said Craig submitted 10,192 valid signatures — well short of the 15,000 needed. It tossed 11,113 signatures, including 9,879 that were allegedly fraudulent­ly collected by 18 paid circulator­s.

Staff said Johnson turned in 13,800 valid signatures. They threw out 9,393, including 6,983 that they said are fraudulent and were gathered by many of the same people who also forged signatures that Craig submitted.

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