Public Media from Michigan State University

'Promote the Vote' says it's confident in signatures to get on November ballot

Reginald Hardwick

The organizers of an initiative trying to put a question on the November ballot aimed at growing voter access in Michigan say they're confident the measure will have enough signatures to move forward.

The group, Promote the Vote, isn’t yet revealing how many signatures it has collected ahead of Monday’s deadline to turn them in.

But Executive Director Micheal Davis says the group has “more than enough” to shield the proposed constitutional amendment from scrutiny.

“Promote the Vote ’22 put in strong — put in place very strong safeguards and a thorough signature verification process to ensure that we have a high validity and quality of our signatures, including prescreening and thoroughly examining for duplicate signatures,” Davis said.

If Promote the Vote succeeds in becoming codified into the state constitution, it would guarantee the right to vote without an ID through a signed statement, and it would provide nine days of early in-person voting. The measure would also require the state to fund postage for absentee ballots and applications.

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