Michigan

Ballot Drop Boxes and Private Funding of Elections May Become Constitutional Rights in Michigan

Ballot Drop Boxes and Private Funding of Elections May
Become Constitutional Rights in Michigan 1

A group called Promote the Vote wants to make private funding of elections, early voting, and the use of ballot drop boxes part of the Michigan Constitution.

The proposed constitutional amendment reads in part, “A county, city, or township conducting an election may accept and use publicly-disclosed charitable donations and in-kind contributions to conduct and administer elections.”

In 2018, Promote the Vote sponsored a successful petition drive that led to voter-approved amendments which allowed no-excuse absentee voting, same-day voter registration, and automatic voter registration for any person having contact with an office of the Michigan Secretary of State.

A little over 425,000 valid signatures must be obtained by July 11 for the initiative to be placed on this fall’s ballot. If approved by voters, the changes would be in effect for the 2024 presidential election.

The proposal, if approved, would mandate the installation and use of at least one “state-funded secure” ballot drop box in every municipality in Michigan. Larger communities would be required to have one ballot drop box for every 15,000 registered voters. The drop boxes would be put in place 40 days before any election and could be used to receive applications for absentee ballots as well as voted ballots.

Early voting would also become a constitutional right in Michigan under the proposal. The amendment mandates that early voting sites must be open for at least nine consecutive days prior to the election and operate for at least eight hours a day. More days and more hours could be added “at the discretion of the election official” in charge in each jurisdiction.

The petition language put forward by Promote the Vote would also prohibit the state legislature from stiffening voter ID requirements. It would restrict the conducting of post-election audits to county officials supervised and directed by the Secretary of State, and bar any participation by representatives of the political parties.

The amendment states, “Election audits shall be conducted in public based on methods finalized and made public prior to the election to be audited.”

Jamie Roe, a long-time Republican activist, told The Epoch Times that honest election reform should make it easier to vote and harder to cheat.

“The Promote the Vote efforts just make it easier to cheat,” he said.

Roe is a spokesperson for Secure MI Vote, an organization circulating a petition to change state statutes to prohibit private donations from funding elections and prohibit the government from sending out absentee ballot applications unless requested by the voter.

The plan requires a photo ID for in-person voting and requires a driver’s license, state ID card, or partial Social Security number on all absentee ballot applications submitted by the voter.

A partial Social Security number would have to be provided in order to register to vote.

The initiative would give state-funded ID cards to those experiencing hardship.

A Democrat website characterized the Secure MI Vote petition as “a deceptive effort to silence the voice of the people…It’s about making it harder to vote and more difficult for clerks to run elections.”

Secure MI Vote must obtain 340,000 valid signatures by June 1 to qualify for the November 2022 ballot.

If the petition drive succeeds, the legislature is permitted by the state constitution to vote to make the Secure MI Vote proposal the law of the land, without it going to a referendum.

Should the legislature not pass the proposal into law, it would then go to a vote of the people.

Both houses of the Michigan legislature have Republican majorities.

“By going through the citizen initiative petition process, and then having the legislature enact them, the provisions will not be susceptible to a veto by Governor [Gretchen] Whitmer,” said Roe.

In October 2021, the Democratic governor vetoed three Republican-sponsored voter ID and election integrity bills.

If both Promote the Vote and Secure MI Vote proposals pass, Promote the Vote’s would take precedence because it amends the Michigan constitution rather than just changing state statutes.

Several polls have found that a large majority of Michigan voters favor voter ID and enhanced ballot security.

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Steven Kovac is an Epoch Times reporter who covers the state of Michigan. He is a former small businessman, local elected official, and conservative political activist. He is an ordained minister of the Gospel. Steven and his wife of 32 years have two grown daughters. He can be reached at [email protected]

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