Michigan voters this fall will decide whether to enshrine abortion rights in a constitutional amendment after the state's Supreme Court directed election officials to put the measure on the ballot.
in a constitutional amendment after the state's Supreme Court directed election officials to put the measure on the ballot., the Michigan Supreme Court ordered the Board of State Canvassers to certify a recent petition to get the abortion question on the Nov. 8 ballot.
The fight over the ballot measure went before the high court after members of the Board of State Canvassers were deadlocked 2-2 over whether to allow the initiative to go before voters this fall. Republicans on the board argued that spacing between certain words in the text of the abortion question rendered it no longer “[t]he full text.”
The court sided with the plaintiffs — Reproductive Freedom for All, an abortion-rights group backing the amendment — and ruled that the meaning of the words was "not changed by the alleged insufficient spacing between them."after Thursday's ruling. "Be sure to vote #YesOn3 this November 8." In a concurring opinion, Chief Justice Bridget McCormack noted that over 753,000 residents had signed the proposal, "more than have ever signed any proposal in Michigan’s history.”
"The challengers have not produced a single signer who claims to have been confused by the limited-spacing sections in the full text portion of the proposal," McCormack wrote. "They would disenfranchise millions of Michiganders not because they believe the many thousands of Michiganders who signed the proposal were confused by it, but because they think they have identified a technicality that allows them to do so, a game of gotcha gone very bad.