Laws governing the initiative process in Michigan

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Citizens of Michigan can use the initiative process to amend their constitution and pass state laws. Michigan voters use a direct process in the case of constitutional amendments but an indirect process in the case of proposed laws.

Beginning the process

The Michigan Department of State’s Bureau of Elections offers its staff for consultations on designing the petition format of an initiative measure. Upon determining through the consultation process that an initiative or referendum petition is properly formatted, it is submitted to the Board of State Canvassers for approval as to form. While Michigan election law does not require Board approval of an initiative or referendum petition form, such approval greatly reduces the risk that signatures collected on the form will be ruled invalid due to formatting defects. The Board does not review or approve the actual language of the proposed initiative. When the Secretary of State certifies that enough valid signatures have been collected, the State Director of Elections writes the ballot question and summary. This ballot question and summary is submitted to the Board of Canvassers for review and changes. The Board of Canvassers also holds a public meeting so that proponents, opponents and the general public can comment on the language and ask for changes.

Although, the Board of Canvassers relies on the suggestions of proponents, they need not heed them. If proponents are unsatisfied with the final ballot language and think it’s unfair, they can take the Board of Canvassers to court to get the ballot language changed.

Features of law

Language submission

Initiative language can be submitted to the Michigan Secretary of State at any time.

Signature requirements

Main article: Michigan signature requirements

Signatures are tied to number of votes cast during the election of the Governor. For statutes, 8% of votes cast for Governor (304,101 signatures.) For amendments, 10% of votes cast for Governor (380,126 signatures.) For statutes, if the petition contains a sufficient number of valid signatures the state legislature has 40 session days to adopt or reject the proposal. If the legislature rejects the law, then the measure is placed on the next general election ballot. For amendments, if the petition contains a sufficient number of valid signatures the measure is placed immediately on the next general election ballot.

Distribution requirement

There is no geographic distribution requirement in Michigan.

Circulation period

Sponsors have 180 days to collect signatures. Michigan law says that proponents must submit signatures that have been gathered within a 180-day period and that the number of valid signatures must be at least equal to the required amount for the initiative to qualify for the ballot. The signatures can be gathered, however, within any 180-day period. Thus, proponents can gather signatures at any start point that they want – but they can only submit signatures gathered within the same 180-day period.

Residency requirements

Main article: Residency requirements for petition circulators

Although circulators are required by statute to be residents, a federal court declared that law unconstitutional in 2008.

Signature filing deadline

Signatures for a proposed constitutional amendment must be filed at least 120 days prior to the election. For statutes, signatures must be submitted at least 10 days prior to the start of the state legislative session.

For 2010 ballot measures, the deadlines are:

Verification process

Signatures are verified using a random sampling process.

Single-subject rule

Main article: Single-subject rule

Although Michigan does not have a single-subject restriction, a proposed 2008 ballot initiative was removed from the ballot by a court prior to the election partly on the grounds that the initiative covered too many subjects at once.

Legislative tampering

Main article: Legislative tampering

The Michigan State Legislature can repeal and amend ballot initiatives by a 75% supermajority vote of each house or as otherwise provided by the initiative.

External links

References

The original version of this article was taken with permission from the I&R Institute

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