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Republicans and Democrats on a joint House and Senate legislative committee are deadlocked on absentee ballot rules. The result is those rules will almost certainly not be ready for the upcoming 2022 elections. And that means clerks and election boards could be left without guidance on specific standards to determine who should be allowed to vote. Rick Pluta reports.
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State Attorney General Dana Nessel will seek a second term. She made the announcement Friday via a campaign ad released online. We have more from Rick Pluta.
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There’s a new fight over voting rules at the state Capitol. A Republican-led committee returned proposed voting regulations Wednesday to Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson’s office and asked her agency to re-submit new rules. Rick Pluta reports.
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To ensure Michiganders remain hypervigilant about protecting themselves from someone stealing personal information and to protect them from increasingly…
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Today’s elections will be historic in many ways: A record number of absentee ballots cast in a swing state in the midst of a health crisis. Governor…
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The Michigan Supreme Court is the next stop in a legal fight over whether guns can be openly carried at polling places on Election Day. Secretary of State…
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A federal lawsuit filed by two former Republican secretaries of state has joined the swirl of litigation surrounding absentee voting and the upcoming…
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Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson says Tuesday’s primary elections were by and large a success. But she says the November election will be a much bigger…
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Don’t wait. Drop off your ballot in person. It’s too late to put it in the mail if you want it to be counted. That’s the advice elections officials are…
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Michigan helped push former Vice President Joe Biden closer to the Democratic nomination Tuesday with a decisive win over Senator Bernie Sanders. For…