Group Sues To Get Emergency Manager Law Repeal Before Voters

Other episodes in this series: 
IPR News Features
Date: 
May 4, 2012

By Rick Pluta

A lawsuit was filed today by opponents of Michigan’s emergency manager law. A campaign to repeal the law, a group called Stand Up for Democracy, is trying to force the state to put the referendum on the November ballot.

Stand Up For Democracy is challenging a decision by a state elections board. Two Republicans on the Board of State Canvassers forced a deadlock by voting to keep the union-backed question off the ballot. They say Stand Up for Democracy’s petitions were printed in the wrong font size. That was the conclusion of a business-backed group that’s against the referendum.

Stand Up for Democracy says: not only is the font size correct, but, regardless, an error in font size is not enough to keep the question off the ballot because the campaign substantially complied with the law. The group says keeping the question off the ballot disenfranchises the more than 200,000 voters who signed petitions, and denies the public the right to render its judgment on the emergency manager law.

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