Michigan: Judge won’t immediately stop Benson’s mailing of ballot applications | Beth LeBlanc/The Detroit News
A Michigan Court of Claims judge denied a request Thursday to halt Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson’s mailing of absentee ballot applications to all registered voters ahead of August primary and November general elections. Nevin Cooper-Keel, Yvonne Black and serial litigant Robert Davis argued Benson was barred from sending the applications by state law and court precedent prohibiting elected officials from mailing unsolicited absentee ballot applications. But Judge Cynthia Stephens argued those rules don’t reflect the loosened voting restrictions enacted under a voting rights initiative approved by voters in 2018. And those cases, Stephen said, only spoke to “local elections officials,” not the secretary of state. “…there is some support for the notion that she possesses superior authority as compared to local election officials,” wrote Stephens, an appointee of Democratic former Gov. Jennifer Granholm.
