warner55 posted:
We need a bill to protect the voters from people that want
to take our rights away.
Like all the so called freespeakers.I will repeat myself,you do not have
enough to do.
Since reference to me has been made here, I will jump back
into the discussion.
First of all, it is true we need to protect voters – that
is, we need to protect ourselves – from people who would take away our
rights. Passage of SB 413 would help
protect our rights by increasing transparency in the Michigan Constitution’s
amendment process.
Second, I do have plenty to do in my life other than respond
to whacked out posts that say things like the following.
warner55 posted:
And it is non of your business either what the petition language
says,unless you are going to sign the thing.
If the author of that statement had not made it clear he/she
was serious by repeating it in more elaborated form, it would not be worthy of
response. But the idea expressed
in that statement is so repugnant that when
made seriously it must be challenged.
Petitions and initiatives to change our Michigan
Constitution, the fundamental law of our State, are very much the business of
every citizen. Period.
To suggest that the wording of Constitutional amendment
initiative petitions and ballot proposals is only the business of those who
sign them is one of the most anti-American statements ever posted on this
board.
This nation was founded on the principle of participatory
governance. That means we are
supposed to be governed not by secret cabals but by “the people” at large. Note that the very first words of our
national Constitution say,
We The People of the United States … .
In Michigan, the very first article of our State
Constitution says, in its entirety,
§ 1 Political power.
Sec. 1.
All political power is inherent in the people. Government is
instituted for their equal benefit, security and protection.
Every bill in the legislature (including this one) begins
with the words,
The people of the State of Michigan Enact:
The more we know about initiative petitions, and what they
say, the better will be our collective decision on whether they should be
adopted. This applies at every
step of the process, from signing the initiative petition (or not) to voting
for (or against) its being added to our Constitution.
It makes great sense to require that the Board of Canvassers
approve ballot language for an initiative petition to amend the State
Constitution before signatures are collected.
Pre-approval ensures that every valid signature that is
collected really would count toward putting the proposal on the ballot.
Pre-approval for clarity and form ensures that petition
signers have full opportunity to know exactly what they and fellow voters will
be voting on if the petition drive is successful.
Pre-approval for clarity opens the process, so the public in
general has a better opportunity to know who is sponsoring a petition, and what
the petition seeks to do. A better
informed public is positioned to make better decisions at the petition signing
and election day stages of the process.
SB 413 may not pass.
But it should. This is one
of the better pieces of legislation proposed so far during this session.