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Jim Stamas recall, Michigan State Senate (2016)

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Michigan State Senate recall
Jim Stamas.jpg
Officeholders
Jim Stamas
Recall status
Did not go to a vote
See also
Recall overview
Political recall efforts, 2016
Recalls in Michigan
Michigan recall laws
State legislative recalls
Recall reports

An effort to recall Jim Stamas, a member of the Republican Party, from his elected position representing District 36 in the Michigan State Senate was launched on March 7, 2016. Supporters of the recall needed to collect 21,670 valid signatures within a 60-day period to move the recall forward. Stamas was targeted for recall over his support of fuel tax and vehicle registration fee increases as part of a road-funding plan.[1]

Petitioners had until September 3, 2016, to submit the necessary signatures to move the recall forward. No signatures were submitted.

Timeline

  • March 7, 2016: Michigan Board of State Canvassers approved the language for the recall petition.[1]
  • September 3, 2016: Deadline to submit at least 21,670 signatures.

Background

See also: Michigan Sales Tax Increase for Transportation Amendment, Proposal 1 (May 2015)

Stamas, Sen. Wayne Schmidt (R), Sen. Arlan Meekhof (R), and Sen. Darwin Booher (R) were targeted for recall because of their support for raising taxes and fees as part of a road-funding plan. On May 5, 2015, Michigan voters defeated a measure that would have caused one constitutional amendment and 10 statutes to go into effect.[1]

Supporters of the recall were angry at the four senators because they voted in favor of legislation months after voters rejected a ballot measure that would have raised those same taxes and fees.[1][2]

Path to the ballot

See also: Laws governing recall in Michigan

Recall process

Recall is a process whereby an elected official can be removed from office prior to the end of his or her term. All elected officials in Michigan are subject to recall except judges of courts of record.[3] The process for recalling a state official in Michigan is outlined below:

  • A recall petition must first be filed with the Board of State Canvassers. The board holds a hearing to determine whether the reason for the petition is factual and clear; that is the only criteria considered by the board to approve or reject the petition. Click here to learn more about these hearings.
  • Once approved by the board, the petitioner must amass a number of signatures equal to 25 percent of the number of votes cast in the last general election in the electoral district of the officer sought to be recalled.[4] The petitioner has 60 days to collect these signatures beginning on the date the first signature is collected; however, the petition must be submitted to the Michigan Secretary of State no later than 180 days after it was approved by the board.[4][5]
  • If an approved petition is appealed to the state Court of Appeals, then "the recall petition cannot be circulated until the Court of Appeals renders a decision or until 40 days following the date of appeal, whichever is sooner."[6]
  • The Secretary of State then has 35 days to determine the validity of the signatures on the petition by verifying the voter registration status of those who signed.[7] If the petition is approved, a special recall election will be scheduled on the next general election date wherein other candidates may challenge the incumbent for the governor's seat.[4]
  • If an election is forced, the incumbent may submit a justification statement for the conduct that triggered the recall which is printed on the special election ballot for voters to consider.

Clarity and factual hearing

A clarity and factual hearing is the first step in the recall process. Michigan laws state that the reason for petition must be deemed factual and clear by the Board of State Canvassers before the recall petition can be placed in circulation. The board does not document a rationale for their determination, only the judgment of rejected or approved.[4]

The board also does not have the authority to make a determination on the legitimacy of the reason for recall, nor do Michigan laws explicitly state the criteria for judging a petition as factual and clear.[4] This means that any reason for the recall can be placed on a petition and approved for circulation, so long as the reason is clearly stated and does not contain falsehoods.

Deadline

Supporters of the Jim Stamas recall needed to submit 21,670 valid signatures within a 60-day period to force a recall election.[1] Supporters had 180 days after the board approved the language or until September 3, 2016, to turn in the recall petition with signatures or the petition became invalid.[8]

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms Jim Stamas Michigan Senate Recall. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

External links

Footnotes