The Oakland Press

Board declines to certify LGBTQ rights ballot drive

- By David Eggert

LANSING >> The Michigan elections board on Monday declined to certify an LGBTQ-rights ballot drive after determinin­g it did not submit enough valid voter signatures.

The 4-0 vote from two Democrats and two Republican­s came after the elections bureau did a second review and estimated Fair and Equal Michigan turned in roughly 263,000 legitimate signatures, about 76,000 short. The group, whose donors include prominent businesses, had spent $2.9 million to gather more than 468,000 signatures.

It vowed to appeal the determinat­ion in court.

The proposal would revise the state’s 1976 civil rights law to prohibit discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n or gender identity in employment, housing and public accommodat­ions. Organizers want to place the measure before the Republican-led Legislatur­e, where similar legislatio­n has long stalled. If lawmakers did not act, it would go to a statewide vote in November 2022.

Election staffers ruled many signatures ineligible because the signers were not registered voters or because

of address, date or other errors.

“Fair and Equal Michigan provided numerous examples to the board detailing how a significan­t number of our signatures were improperly thrown out,” spokesman Josh Hovey

said. “The Board of Canvassers never addressed the issues we raised with the way the Bureau of Elections staff handled our petitions, and we are confident that if all our valid signatures were counted then we would easily meet the threshold to move forward.”

More than 20 states expressly bar discrimina­tion in employment, housing and public accommodat­ions based on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity while another — Wisconsin — prohibits discrimina­tion against gays and lesbians but not transgende­r people, according to the Human Rights Campaign, a national LGBTQright­s organizati­on.

In 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a federal civil rights law protects gay, lesbian and transgende­r people from discrimina­tion in employment. Supporters of the Michigan measure have said it would provide broader protection­s in local employment along with housing and public accommodat­ions.

The Michigan Supreme Court has agreed to consider whether the state’s existing ban against sex discrimina­tion covers sexual orientatio­n and gender identity. The lawsuit was filed by Rouch World, a Sturgis-based wedding venue and park, and Marquetteb­ased Uprooted Electrolys­is after they refused services to a same-sex couple and a transgende­r woman who subsequent­ly filed complaints with the state Department of Civil Rights.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Ballots are processed at a central counting board in Detroit.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Ballots are processed at a central counting board in Detroit.

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