Rick Snyder recall, Michigan (2011)
Michigan Governor recall |
---|
Officeholders |
Recall status |
See also |
Recall overview Political recall efforts, 2011 Recalls in Michigan Michigan recall laws State executive recalls Recall reports |
An effort to recall Rick Snyder, a Republican elected in 2010, from his position as the Governor of Michigan was launched in May 2011.[1] The initiative failed to garner enough supporters to get the recall on the ballot.
Snyder beat Democrat Virg Bernero 58.11 percent to 39.9 percent in 2010.
Background
The group "Committee to Recall Rick Snyder," which launched a website at FireSnyder.org, supported the recall effort.[1] In order to force a recall, the group had to collect 806,522 valid signatures, equaling 25 percent of the votes cast in the 2010 gubernatorial election. The deadline for submitting signatures in time to get the recall question on the 2011 ballot was August 5, 2011. The recall group hoped to collect more than one million signatures in order to allow for the possibility of some signatures being disqualified.[2]
Their work began at the end of April, when the election panel of Washtenaw County, where Governor Snyder resided, approved the language of the proposed petition.[3]
An early op-ed held that recall ought to be reserved for corruption and severe negligence, not for a governor carrying out a controversial policy. The official reason behind the push to recall Snyder was his support for substantial expansion of the power of financial managers addressing dire situations in insolvent municipalities.[4]
Several state legislators were also targeted for recall because of their support for the emergency manager law. Voters defeated a referendum on the issue on the statewide ballot on November 6, 2012.
Path to the ballot
- See also: Laws governing recall in Michigan
Organizers had to turn in valid signatures equal to 25 percent of the ballots cast for the governor in the most recent election; in this case, that threshold was 806,522. Activists aimed for 1.1 million signatures to be on the safe side. They had a 90-day window to reach that number and could not legally submit signatures earlier than July 1, 2011.
Organizers admitted that early fundraising proceeded slowly and that most of the total raised when they kicked off recall efforts in late May had already been spent on printing costs for petitions.[5]
If Snyder was successfully recalled, he would have faced a special election. It was not clear whether he would hold office while awaiting the special election or if Lieutenant Governor Brian Calley would take over.
In late July, the organization fired media spokesman Tim Kramer, who said he had no idea why he was removed. He had served in the position since the recall campaign began.[6]
Organizers fell far short of their goal of 807,000 signatures by August 5 in order to get the measure on the November 8 ballot. Committee to Recall Rick Snyder communication director Tom Bryant said they aimed for a September 29 deadline to put it on the February 2012 ballot, but on September 30, 2011, the committee announced that it fell short of its attempt to get on the February 2012 ballot.[7][8]
See also
- Recall campaigns in Michigan
- Political recall efforts, 2011
- Laws governing recall in Michigan
- Rick Snyder
External links
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 The Detroit News, "Petitions for Snyder recall to circulate," May 21, 2011
- ↑ Detroit Free Press, "Gov. Rick Snyder's opponents to rally in hopes of getting him recalled," May 21, 2011
- ↑ Huffington Post, "Rick Snyder Recall Election Effort Clears First Hurdle In Michigan," April 29, 2011
- ↑ MLive.com, "Editorial: Why a recall effort against Gov. Rick Snyder should be scrapped," May 17, 2011
- ↑ Detroit Free Press, "Gov. Rick Snyder's opponents to rally in hopes of getting him recalled," May 21, 2011
- ↑ The Detroit News, "Snyder recall group fires spokesman, says it may miss target," July 25, 2011
- ↑ Lansing State Journal, "Snyder recall efforts retooled," August 8, 2011
- ↑ The Detroit News, "Group attempting to recall Snyder fails to get issue on ballot," October 1, 2011