Governor Snyder: Take This Law and Shove It! Michigan voters defeat dictator bill

Latest

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
The photos on this page show what the fight for Democracy looks like in Michigan! Traverse City activists organized a grassroots campaign to overturn the dictator law. They stand in support of Benton Harbor, one of the first cities to experience the wrath of an Emergency Manager.
Photo/rejectemergencymanagers.com

By Claire McClinton
A statewide bus tour, letters to the editor, TV ads, big donors, and more, did not keep Michigan’s Governor Snyder from suffering a stunning defeat on November 6 when Proposal 1— the Emergency Manager (Dictator) Law was struck down by Michigan Voters. All but six of Michigan’s 83 counties said NO to martial law.
The law allowed the governor to dispatch “Emergency Managers” (EM) to municipalities including school districts. Empowered by the law, “Managers” displaced local elected officials, revised union contracts, sold public assets, or even dissolved a city or school district altogether. The seven localities under siege by Managers are majority Black and the home of formerly behemoth industrial giants such as those in Detroit (the Big 3), Flint (General Motors), and Benton Harbor (Whirlpool).
Michigan Forward, an advocacy group of Detroit that spearheaded the drive, was joined by Stand Up for Democracy (supported by AFSCME) who led the court battles. Acting on behalf of the state, pro-EM groupings did everything they could to keep the proposal off the ballot, including challenging whether the proposal was written in the correct font size. The Michigan Board of Canvassers became the “Font police” and the Court of Appeals backed them up. It got so ugly that even the Detroit Free Press, which supports the EM law, said that the decision was “making a mockery” of the judicial system.
During the course of the year-long battle, labor groups began to retreat from the fight for Democracy when the Michigan legislature threatened to pass “Right to Work” legislation. Funds and manpower shifted to another ballot proposal for a Constitutional Amendment to guarantee the right to bargain collectively. However, the grassroots, independent groupings that had emerged against the dictatorship legislation continued to mobilize against the law. Cities like Traverse City, and Ann Arbor had their own local organizations even though their cities were not saddled with Managers themselves. Also, Republicans in areas such as Bay County amassed a network to overturn the law.

Over 100 people join Concerned Pastors for Social Action and PA 4 Task Force to protest oppressive water rate hikes via dictatorship at the world famous Crim Race in Flint, MI
Over 100 people join Concerned Pastors for Social Action and PA 4 Task Force to protest oppressive water rate hikes via dictatorship at the world famous Crim Race in Flint, MI. Photo/Chad Richardson

Michigan’s Mackinac Center for public policy (a statewide right-wing think tank) where the Emergency Manager law was largely cultivated and promoted, also took a huge loss. Their quest to help establish a post-industrial model without “Democracy as we know it” was soundly rejected. Not satisfied with what voters said, and refusing to take NO for an answer, the legislature vowed to reintroduce a similar bill.
In the Emergency Manager world, bondholders continue to be paid while public assets are privatized and public unions are crushed. In the end, Michigan voters could not reconcile financial crisis as a pretext for martial law. As the nation and the world watched, we did the right thing.

Claire McClinton is a Flint resident and UAW retiree.

Free to republish but please credit the People's Tribune. Visit us at www.peoplestribune.org, email peoplestribune@gmail.com, or call 773-486-3551.

The People’s Tribune brings you articles written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Unsigned articles reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: ©2024 peoplestribune.org. Please donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

Supreme Court Dismantles Federal Regulation of Business

Recent Supreme Court decisions have opened the floodgates to allow corporate interests, in the name of profit, to dismantle the system of federal regulation that protects our rights and wellbeing.

Campaign to Debunk the Lies about Migrants and Refugees

Join a campaign to combat the mainstream lies and shine a moral light on the truth: that no human being is illegal, and seeking asylum is a human right.

U.S. Supreme Court’s Criminalization of Homeless Met with Universal Disgust

A movement is growing against the latest “legalized” atrocity on the most vulnerable, in governments, among advocates, ordinary people, and most importantly, by organized and individual homeless people. As said in the homeless movement, “We only get what we are organized to take!”

Project 2025: Far Right’s Plan to Demolish Immigration Threatens All of Us

The right-wing Heritage Foundation's Project 2025, billed as a policy playbook for a second Trump administration, includes provisions that would demolish the existing immigration system and set the stage for mass deportations.

Supreme Court Rules Arresting, Citing People for Not Having Shelter is Constitutional

Criminalizing the homeless for sleeping in public spaces when having no other option does not violate the cruel and unusual punishment clause of U.S. Constitution’s Eighth Amendment, according to new ruling.

More from the People's Tribune