The Oakland Press

GOP launches ballot drive to tighten voting laws

Move would allow lawmakers to enact changes without Whitmer

- By David Eggert

LANSING >> Republican­s on Monday announced a ballot drive to tighten Michigan’s voting and election laws, backing a maneuver that would let GOP lawmakers enact the changes without Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s signature.

The step, which had been signaled for months, was decried by Democrats and voting-rights advocates. The Democratic governor had vowed to veto similar bills pending in the GOPcontrol­led Legislatur­e.

Secure MI Vote, which is being run by veteran GOP operatives, will need to collect roughly 340,000 valid voter signatures within six months of starting to circulate petitions.

The initiative would toughen a requiremen­t that voters submit photo identifica­tion, eliminatin­g an option that lets those without one submit an affidavit and vote. More than 11,400 of nearly 5.6 million voters did that in November.

Instead, people with no ID would get a provisiona­l ballot and have to verify their identity within six days after the election for it to count.

The measure also would add an ID component to absentee ballot applicatio­ns, requiring that voters submit their driver’s license number or the last four digits of their Social Security number. Nearly 3.3 million people, a record, voted absentee last November. Voters currently seeking an absentee ballot by mail must sign the applicatio­n, and the signature is matched to the voter file.

The initiative also would prohibit the secretary of state and local clerks from sending applicatio­ns to people who did not request them and create a $3 million fund to ensure low-income residents have an ID. The funding also would make the measure referen

dum-proof under state law.

Jamie Roe, spokesman for Secure MI Vote, said voters “across the political spectrum” questioned the integrity of the 2016 and 2020 election results.

“The success of this initiative will make it easier to vote, harder to cheat, and restore confidence in the electoral system for Republican­s, Democrats and independen­ts alike,” he said in a statement.

The Michigan Democratic Party and other groups accused the GOP of trying to confuse voters and perpetuati­ng Trump’s lies with the ballot drive.

“They want fewer people to vote because they just discovered what we have always known, when people vote, Democrats win. That is what this ballot proposal is all about, creating barriers to voting so fewer people have access to the polls,” said chair Lavora Barnes.

She noted that twothirds of Michigan voters in 2018 passed a constituti­onal amendment expanding voting options.

Joe Biden won the battlegrou­nd state by about 155,000 votes, or 2.8 percentage points, but former President Trump has falsely alleged widespread fraud. His own attorney general found no evidence of it in Michigan or other states. Trump’s allegation­s also have been dismissed by judges and refuted by state election officials, an arm of his own administra­tion’s Homeland Security Department and Republican­s in the Michigan Senate.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Voters stand in line outside of Pere Marquette Depot to cast their ballots in Bay City on Election Day.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Voters stand in line outside of Pere Marquette Depot to cast their ballots in Bay City on Election Day.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States