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Michigan Court of Claims won’t toss Trump ballot case

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The Michigan Court of Claims has set a speedy schedule to decide whether former President Donald Trump is allowed to appear on Michigan’s primary and general election ballots.
Rick Pluta

The Michigan Court of Claims has refused to throw out a lawsuit that seeks to keep Donald Trump off the Michigan presidential ballot.

Judge James Redford on Wednesday also denied a request by the former President to become a direct party to the case. That’s because the lawsuit isn’t against Trump. Instead, it pits four voters against Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson in her role as Michigan’s top election official. The voters say Benson must refuse to put Trump’s name on the ballot under the insurrection clause of the U.S. Constitution. They say he is automatically disqualified because he is culpable for violating the clause by his encouragement of the January 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

Benson, a Democrat, has said she won’t keep Trump off the Michigan presidential primary ballot without a court order.

Redford said Trump’s legal filings make no argument on how the court has the authority to let him join the legal action. Redford gave the Trump campaign until this coming Monday to file additional arguments.

But Redford also said, no matter what, Trump’s attorneys will be allowed to file a friend of the court brief representing his perspective. Trump’s attorney and the Michigan Republican Party had no immediate comment.

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Rick Pluta is the managing editor for the Michigan Public Radio Network.