#FactsMatter, the Citizens Research Council of Michigan podcast
The podcast once again delves into the Citizens Research Council’s Constitution series, examining each article of the Michigan Constitution as voters face the decision in November on whether to hold a constitutional convention (con-con). This week, #FactsMatter host Guy Gordon and Research Council President Eric Lupher discuss the 8th paper in the series, breaking down Article IV – Legislative Branch, which, Lupher explains, has been the most frequently targeted article for amendment because voters often want to limit legislative power. Yet most attempts fail at the ballot box. “They have targeted this article more than any other… [but] have a hard time convincing a majority of voters.” With redistricting and gerrymandering across the country currently dominating the news because 2026 is a major election year and a recent massive SCOTUS decision, Guy and Eric touch on Michigan’s Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission (MICRC), created in 2018 to reduce gerrymandering. With the federal Voting Rights Act weakened, other states are aggressively gerrymandering, while Michigan’s hands are tied. A con-con could revisit the MICRC. Michigan’s Constitution fixes the legislature at 110 House members and 38 Senators, unlike states that tie size to population. The 1963 Constitution implied it assumed a part-time legislature, but by the early 1970s, lawmakers stopped going home in June and had evolved into a full-time body. Lupher explains that the shift complicates the rules governing special sessions, referenda, and lame-duck activity. A con-con might try to tweak term limits and strengthen Michigan’s financial disclosure laws. They take on all of that and more, concluding that Article 4 contains both routine structural rules and several high-stakes issues ripe for reform. A constitutional convention could finally address long-standing dysfunction—but it’s an all-or-nothing gamble.
130 episodios
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