Michigan
RFK Jr. to remain on the ballot in key battleground states of Michigan and Wisconsin
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will still appear on the ballot in Michigan and Wisconsin despite suspending his presidential campaign — and could remain on the ballot in other critical battleground states, including Nevada and North Carolina.
The former independent presidential candidate, who suspended his 2024 bid on Friday and endorsed former President Donald Trump, said he would take his name off the ballot in key states where he could hurt the Republican’s results.
However, his request to escape has already backfired in at least two swing states that could decide the election.
In Michigan, it is too late for him to be removed.
“Minor party candidates cannot withdraw, so his name will remain on the ballot in the November election,” Cheri Hardmon, press secretary for Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, told Axios on Tuesday.
Kennedy was nominated earlier this year as the candidate of the Natural Law Party.
“The Natural Law Party held their convention to select electors for [RFK Jr.]. They cannot meet at this point to select new electors since it’s past the primary,” Hardmon told the outlet.
Both the Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris campaigns have been targeting Michigan hard to herd voters to their side.
The Great Lake State went to President Biden in 2020 by less than three percentage points.
Trump’s running mate, Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio), previously told The Post that he is focusing on Michigan to win over Midwestern voters.
Meanwhile, the Wisconsin Elections Commission also voted Tuesday to deny Kennedy’s request to be removed from the ballot.
The Commission based its decision on a Wisconsin law that says anyone who files nomination papers and qualifies to appear on the ballot cannot decline nomination.
“You’re not going to be able to cut a deal with someone and play last-minute games,” Democratic Commissioner Mark Thomsen said.
“Which is what I think is happening here, frankly… We know Trump and Kennedy are playing games.”
The Badger State’s Election Commission is a bipartisan board made up of six appointed members — three Democrats and three Republicans. This means no independents or third parties are represented.
The result has come down to approximately 20,000 votes in Wisconsin in four of the previous six presidential elections.
Kennedy is also likely to face challenges removing his name from the ballot in other critical swing states such as Nevada and North Carolina, NPR reported.
However, it is unclear exactly how Kennedy dropping out will impact his supporters and whether they will cast their vote for Trump or Harris — or not vote.
Michigan
Michigan mobile home water provider, president accused of falsifying water safety tests
A water services provider and its president are accused of falsifying water safety and discharge tests for private water systems serving mobile home communities in Michigan, state officials said.
Douglas Environmental is charged with six counts of forgery and one count of conducting a criminal enterprise, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel said. The firm’s president, Brian Powell, 57, of Brighton, is also charged with six counts of forgery and seven counts of safe drinking water violations.
According to authorities, Douglas Environmental provided private water systems for several mobile home communities throughout Michigan, including the following communities:
- Moon Lake Mobile Home Park in Shiawassee County
- Thornapple Lake Estates in Barry County
- Fenton Harbor Condominiums in Genesee County
- Hickory Hills Mobile Homes in Calhoun County
- Green Brook Estates in Livingston County
- Western Pines in Kalamazoo County
- Victory Gardens in Genesee County
- North Bay Mobile Home Park in Genesee County
State prosecutors accuse Douglas Environmental of falsifying water test results at Moon Lake Mobile Home Park, Thornapple Lake Estates and Fenton Harbor Condominiums at least six times in 2023. Between 2020 and 2023, the company is also accused of failing to report water tests that exceeded maximum contaminant levels at Hickory Hills Mobile Homes, Green Brook Estates, North Bay Mobile Home Park, Fenton Harbor, Victory Gardens and Western Pines.
The Michigan DNR investigated Douglas Environmental after the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy discovered data discrepancies between reports and what the company submitted for review, state prosecutors say.
“Safe drinking water relies on honest testing,” said Nessel in a statement. “Falsifying reports jeopardizes the well-being of residents, and I am grateful for EGLE’s and DNR’s work to uncover and investigate these extremely troubling allegations. My office will continue to prosecute those who put Michiganders’ health at risk.”
Authorities say that based on EGLE’s testing, the public was not harmed by the alleged scheme.
“It’s deeply disappointing when individuals choose to falsify test results; they undermine the trust that communities place in the systems designed to safeguard them. Michigan residents deserve complete confidence that the water they rely on is safe,” said EGLE Director Phil Roos.
Powell will appear in the 55th District Court on May 5.
Michigan
Kyle Whittingham says Michigan freshman is ‘terrific,’ Bryce Underwood is ‘mega talent,’ and two position groups are standing out
Michigan Wolverines football head coach Kyle Whittingham helped make Utah a power out west, and is now tasked with getting the Maize and Blue back to ‘Champions Of The West.’
“I’m here to help this football team get to where we believe we can be,” Whittingham said on On3’s Crain And Cone. “I’m not here to change traditions or mess with that. The traditions here and the history is incredible, and it’s just steeped in tradition, this program. So, it’s not my place to meddle with that.
“We’re going to put a physical, tough product on the field. That’s the expectation at Michigan is to be physical and tough. That’s what we’re striving for.”
That process started in January, with Whittingham hiring his strength coach from Utah, Doug Elisaia.
“High-level athletes, like what we have here at Michigan and in Division-I football, seem to thrive on structure and discipline and a routine,” Whittingham said. “And you’ve got to be consistent. You can’t have highs and lows, you can’t be a rollercoaster. Players need to come into the facility every day, know what’s expected, know what’s expected at practice, know what’s expected in the weight room. They seem to thrive in a very structured environment. We certainly have that here.
“The first thing we did was overhaul the strength program, because a lot of the toughness and grit in the football team is developed in the strength program — and we feel we’ve got one of the best in the business in Doug Elisaia running our strength program.”
Bryce Underwood is a ‘mega talent’
The first meeting Whittingham had with a player was with sophomore quarterback Bryce Underwood, a 6-foot-4, 228-pound Detroit native who started all 13 games last season. Underwood completed 60.3 percent of his passes for 2,428 yards and 11 touchdowns with 9 interceptions last season, adding 88 carries for 392 yards and 6 scores, including sacks.
Whittingham provided an update on how he’s performed this spring.
“First of all, he is a mega talent — his arm strength, his athleticism,” the Michigan coach said. “He’s 6-4-plus, 230 pounds. The way he runs. It’s incredible, the gifts that he’s been blessed with.
“Obviously, the first order of business is to learn the new scheme. We have a new scheme going in offensively. It’s not a sharp learning curve. It’s pretty user-friendly. But he’s got to get mastery of that. Once he has mastery of that, which he’s on the right track right now and doing a great job, now it’s just refining a few things with his mechanics and making sure that he completely has a grasp of what we’re doing and what we’re expecting.”
Two Michigan position groups standing out
Whittingham was asked which position groups are standing out most this spring, and first pointed to the running backs. There, junior Jordan Marshall is coming off a 150-carry, 932-yard, 10-touchdown season, even while missing time at the end of the year. Freshman Savion Hiter enrolled early and has turned heads, too, a five-star prospect.
“I really love our running back room,” Whittingham said. “We have Jordan Marshall coming back, who’s a proven commodity, and Savion Hiter, who was the top running back in the country in some polls. He’s really lived up to that. He was a mid-year guy, and he has looked terrific through his first six practices. [Senior] Bryson Kuzdzal is another guy in that room. So, we feel like we’ve got a very strong running back situation.”
Michigan’s defensive line is also strong, per Whittingham, despite returning just one starter, senior tackle Trey Pierce.
“Defensively, the front,” Whittingham said. “We feel like we have a good front coming back, and that’s something that is always critical. Your defense starts at the line of scrimmage, and we feel like we’ve got some dudes up front.”
Michigan
Man gets prison for fake signatures that roiled Michigan governor race
How to register to vote in Michigan: Step-by-step guide
Registering to vote in Michigan is simple and can be done online, by mail, or in person, depending on how close you are to Election Day.
A Florida man was sentenced to two to 20 years in prison Tuesday, March 31 for his role in a fraudulent petition scandal that derailed the candidacies of five Republican candidates for Michigan governor in 2022, according to online court records.
Macomb County Circuit Judge James Maceroni also ordered Willie Reed to pay nearly $334,000 in restitution to the campaigns that were victimized, records show. The judge ordered about $137,000 of that amount to go to Oakland County businessman Perry Johnson, who was disqualified from the primary ballot for governor in 2022 and is running again this year, and about $119,000 to former Detroit Police Chief James Craig, whose bid for Michigan governor ended when he was disqualified from the 2022 primary ballot.
“The actions of the defendants deliberately undermined our electoral process and denied voters their choices in our primary,” Attorney General Dana Nessel said in a news release. “I hope this outcome serves as a deterrent to others who attempt to subvert our system.”
In February, a jury convicted Reed, co-owner of Mack Douglas LLC and owner/operator of Petitions Reed LLC, of about a dozen fraud-related charges and conducting a criminal enterprise, while acquitting him of about 17 other charges. Convicted of 22 fraud-related charges, including conducting a criminal enterprise, was co-defendant Shawn Wilmoth of Warren, owner/operator of First Choice LLC and co-owner of Mack Douglas LLC. A third defendant, Jamie Wilmoth of Warren, was acquitted of all charges.
Prosecutors said the defendants charged campaigns more than $700,000 for valid signatures but knowingly delivered tens of thousands of forged signatures on nomination petitions to eight campaigns, including three judicial campaigns. The fraudulent signatures were later discovered by Michigan Bureau of Elections officials, after which the Board of State Canvassers ordered disqualifications. The candidates themselves were not accused of wrongdoing.
“He was treated fairly by the judge,” Reed’s attorney, Wright Blake of Detroit, told the Detroit Free Press after the March 31 sentencing.
However, Reed wants to appeal his convictions, Blake said, and the judge granted him an appeal bond to allow him to do so.
Shawn Wilmoth was sentenced to four to 20 years in prison on March 18 after a jury convicted him Feb. 9 of conducting a criminal enterprise and defrauding gubernatorial candidates Johnson, Donna Brandenburg, Mike Brown, and Michael Markey, as well as three judicial candidates. Shawn Wilmoth was acquitted on charges related to Craig’s petition signatures.
Maceroni ordered Wilmoth to pay $376,601 in restitution to the victims.
Contact Paul Egan: 517-372-8660 or pegan@freepress.com
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