A former state legislative aide renowned for his knowledge of legal and judicial history has excoriated a Detroit Free Press reporter and the newspaper’s editorial policy that favors establishing an independent commission to draw Congressional and legislative maps. Bruce A. Timmons, for decades a key committee staffer for both Democratic and Republican lawmakers in Lansing, […]
Legislation Introduced to License Weather Forecasters
LANSING — A bi-partisan bill to license and regulate meteorologists and TV/radio weather forecasters was introduced in the Michigan House of Representatives Friday. The measure’s primary sponsor, State Rep. Sam Yeotis (D-Engadine), said he had secured 96 co-sponsors from both major political parties, well more than the 55 votes needed to the pass the bill […]
Snyder on Verge of Overlooked Historic First
Rick Snyder is about to become the first governor in Michigan history to single-handedly appoint a four-member majority on the state Supreme Court, and he will have done it in just his seventh year in office. The only other governors with as many appointments to the high bench as Snyder were William G. Milliken and […]
The New Yorker: Are Liberals on the Wrong Side of History?
Three new books interrogate the premises of the Enlightenment. By Adam Gopnik The true élite of modern societies is composed of engineers, mechanics, and artisans—masters of reality, not big thinkers.Illustration by Leigh Guldig Of all the prejudices of pundits, presentism is the strongest. It is the assumption that what is happening now is going to […]
Does Tennessee Have a Lesson for Michigan?
There have been three Michigan governors who lay in state in the capitol rotunda in Lansing after they died (Stevens T. Mason, Frank Fitzgerald in 1939, and George Romney in 1995), but only one state legislator received such an honor. That would be Mo Hood (D-Detroit), who died in 1998 at the end of his […]
Bloomberg: Democrats Strike Back in the Redistricting Wars
By Albert R. Hunt Kelly Ward is determined not to bang her head, politically, against the wall. She spent four years running the Democrats’ House Campaign Committee where, thanks to the Republicans’ prodigious gerrymandering of congressional districts, she made little progress. Convinced that under the current structure Democrats have little chance to win a majority in […]
A Strange Confluence: Statehood, Education and Michigan Politics
Puerto Rico, Gov. Rick Snyder’s 21st Century Education Commission, and a long-forgotten Michigan Congressman — what could they possibly have in common? The answer: Alvin M. Bentley of Owosso, whose widow, Billie, endowed the University of Michigan’s famous Bentley Historical Library. Bentley was the only man ever elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from […]
In Flint, a Squeaky Wheel Doesn’t Get the Grease
Two of the most outspoken activists in the Flint water crisis have seen no effort by government authorities to replace their allegedly lead-tainted pipes under Mayor Karen Weaver’s “Fast Start” program. Melissa Mays and LeeAnne Walters have testified repeatedly at various public forums over the past two years, claiming their families have been exposed to […]
Split decision? Not Really. Big GOP Win!
President Donald Trump seems to have limited regard for the judiciary, but maybe that’s because his main experience so far has been with the “Notorious Ninth” on the issue of immigrant/refugee “travel bans.” Trump should be pleased to know that, closer to home, the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals is a lot friendlier. Maybe […]
Can State House Dems Break Through?
Between 2010 and 2016, for the first time in Michigan history three out of four straight general elections for the state House of Representatives wound up with exactly the same 63R/47D split. Only in 2012, when Republicans managed only 59 seats and the Democrats climbed to 51, was there anything different. That means that Republican […]