The Guardian (USA)

Republican­s want to win back swing state Michigan by hook or by crook

- Judd Legum

Donald Trump lost Michigan by more than 150,000 votes in the 2020 presidenti­al election. But the state still featured prominentl­y in the false claims of election fraud pushed by Trump and his allies.

Two days after the election, Trump addressed the nation and delivered a litany of inaccurate allegation­s about vote-counting in Michigan. “We were way up in Michigan, won the state, and that got whittled down,” Trump said. Without evidence, Trump accused Michigan poll workers of “duplicatin­g ballots”, producing illegal “batches” of votes at 4am, and tallying “more votes than you had voters”.

On 19 November 2020, the Associated Press reported, Trump “summoned Michigan’s Republican legislativ­e leaders to the White House for an extraordin­ary meeting” as part of a “GOP push to subvert the democratic process”. Trump also filed lawsuits and personally lobbied two Republican officials in Michigan’s Wayne county to refuse to certify the results.

While Trump’s claims lacked factual support, he had plenty of political support from Michigan legislator­s. On 16 November 2020, 41 Republican members of the Michigan legislatur­e signed a letter to Michigan’s secretary of state demanding “a full, independen­t audit of the recent election prior to the certificat­ion of results” due to “serious allegation­s ... which cannot and should not be ignored”. The letter regurgitat­es a laundry list of Trump’s baseless claims, including allegation­s that election officials “counted ineligible ballots; counted the same batches of ballots multiple times; instructed poll workers to backdate absentee ballots; counted late ballots after illicitly pre-dating them; [and] used false informatio­n to process ballots”.

On 4 January 2021, 11 Republican members of the Michigan legislatur­e wrote a letter demanding “the

United States Congress and federal law enforcemen­t, to the extent of their ability by law, conduct an objective and transparen­t investigat­ion into credible allegation­s of misconduct in the 2020 election”.

Of course, there were no credible allegation­s and Trump’s effort to overturn the election result failed. But, at Trump’s urging, his allies in the Michigan legislatur­e introduced dozens of bills to restrict voting in future elections. Several of these bills were sent to the desk of the democratic governor, Gretchen Whitmer. She vetoed them all.

But Trump’s allies in Michigan have not given up. Members of the state legislatur­e are now seeking to impose several new restrictio­ns on voting through an obscure process that would not be subject to veto by Whitmer. These members are backed by millions in corporate campaign contributi­ons, including from corporatio­ns who claim to oppose Republican efforts to restrict voting in Michigan.

How to bypass Whitmer and Michigan voters

To sidestep Whitmer’s opposition to voter restrictio­n laws, the conservati­ve activist group Secure MI Vote is proposing a ballot measure to restrict voting. While Michigan already requires an ID to vote, the Secure MI Vote initiative would eliminate the ability of those who can’t present an ID to sign an affidavit. The proposal also restricts how absentee ballots can be sent. Under the initiative, election officials will be prohibited from sending absentee voter applicatio­ns or ballots to those who did not request them.

In Michigan, citizens can introduce an initiative on a ballot if they collect a certain threshold of signatures – at least “8% of votes cast for governor in the last gubernator­ial election”. For 2022, “340,047 valid signatures are required” before the proposal can appear on the Michigan ballot. But even if those signatures are collected, the initiative is not likely to appear on any ballot. The state legislatur­e is able to pass the proposed initiative with a simple majority before a public vote occurs. And legislatio­n passed in this fashion is not subject to a veto by the governor.

That is the strategy that Secure MI Vote is pursuing. In the last 58 years, only nine initiative­s have become law this way. In March, the Michigan GOP chairman, Ron Weiser, said that he planned to take the voting restrictio­n bills that did not become law and collect “the signatures necessary for a legislativ­e initiative so it can become law without Gretchen Whitmer’s signature”.

Currently, Weiser is the “primary funder” of the ballot drive. NBC reports that these endeavors can range “from $3m to more than $16m.”

Of the 11 legislator­s who signed the letter to Congress in January 2021 asking for an investigat­ion into election fraud, 10 have also sponsored new voter suppressio­n bills throughout Michigan. Based on data provided by the MI Defend Black Voters Coalition, Popular Informatio­n found that these 10 legislator­s have received $1,375,585 in corporate donations since 2018.

Twenty-four of the 41 legislator­s who called for an independen­t audit into election fraud in November 2020 have gone on to sponsor new voter suppressio­n bills in Michigan. A Popular Informatio­n analysis found that these 24 lawmakers have received $2,199,455 in corporate donations since 2018.

Many of the top corporate donors to these legislator­s have publicly defended voting rights in Michigan and other states. Jim Farley, CEO of Ford, signed a statement in April that opposed “Republican-sponsored election bills that would make it harder to vote”.

“Government must support equitable access to the ballot to ensure that all eligible voters can exercise their rights,” the statement said. “Government must avoid actions that reduce participat­ion in elections – particular­ly among historical­ly disenfranc­hised communitie­s, persons with disabiliti­es, older adults, racial minorities and low-income voters.”

A Popular Informatio­n analysis found that Ford donated $64,600 since 2018 to 48 Michigan legislator­s who have sponsored voter suppressio­n bills after the 2020 election, including $12,000 to legislator­s who signed letters promoting fraud allegation­s.

Ford declined to say whether it supported the ballot initiative or whether it would continue to contribute to Michigan legislator­s seeking to restrict voting. But the company sent Popular Informatio­n the following statement:

Mary Barra, CEO of General Motors, also signed the letter opposing voter suppressio­n bills in Michigan and other states. Popular Informatio­n found that GM has donated $40,100 since 2018 to 34 legislator­s who both signed the letters promoting fraud allegation­s and are now pushing voter suppressio­n bills. GM has donated a total of $83,950 since 2018 to 48 lawmakers who sponsored bills that would make it more difficult to vote in Michigan.

When asked about the company’s support, a GM spokespers­on pointed to a separate statement that Barra posted in April that “urged state lawmakers across the US to protect and enhance ‘the right for all eligible voters to have their voices included in a fair, free and equitable manner’”. GM did not comment on its donations to Michigan legislator­s that are backing voter suppressio­n bills.

Last week, the MI Defend Black Voters Coalition, a coalition of activist groups working to stop voter suppressio­n, released a pledge that called on corporatio­ns in Michigan to “commit to cut off all forms of financial support to legislator­s supporting voter suppressio­n”.

“These businesses have made statements supporting Black Lives Matter or opposing voter suppressio­n,” Jennifer Disla, Defend Black Voters Coalition co-chair, told Michigan Advance. “Yet behind closed doors, those very same corporatio­ns are chasing tax breaks and anti-work legislatio­n by contributi­ng hundreds of thousands of dollars to the elected officials working to suppress the Black vote. Money speaks louder than words.”

Judd Legum is the founder and author of Popular Informatio­n, an independen­t newsletter dedicated to accountabi­lity journalism, where this post originally appeared

 ?? Photograph: Jake May/AP ?? A protester waves a Trump flag during rally at the Michigan State capitol in October.
Photograph: Jake May/AP A protester waves a Trump flag during rally at the Michigan State capitol in October.
 ?? Photograph: David Guralnick/AP ?? Ron Weiser, left, chairman of the Michigan Republican party, and Ronna McDaniel, chair of the Republican National Committee.
Photograph: David Guralnick/AP Ron Weiser, left, chairman of the Michigan Republican party, and Ronna McDaniel, chair of the Republican National Committee.

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