On Saturday, the Michigan Tea Party held a nominating convention in Saginaw and nominated 23 candidates. On July 26, it filed the list with the Secretary of State. The Secretary of State has still not validated the party’s petition, but the petition is very likely to have enough valid signatures. In Michigan, partisan ballots contain a party logo. The logo for the Tea Party contains a coiled rattlesnake, with the words “Don’t Tread on Me” underneath.
The party didn’t nominate anyone for Governor, and Michigan has no U.S. Senate race this year. The party only nominated two candidates for U.S. House. One is the First District, which is a very strong Democratic-leaning district. But the other Tea Party nominee is running in the 7th district. The vote in that district in 2008 was close between the two major parties. The Democratic nominee received 157,213 votes, and the Republican received 149,781.
The party nominated four statewide nominees, for Secretary of State, Attorney General, Board of Regents, and State Board of Education. For the State Senate, it nominated 6 candidates. Two of them were close in 2006, the last year Michigan voted for State Senate. In the 13th district the vote had been Republican 57,204, Democratic 56,484. In the 7th district it had been Republican 59,647, Democratic 56,156.
For state house, the party nominated 8 candidates. In two of them, in 2008, the vote had been very close between the two major party candidates. The 43rd district had been Republican 20,219, Democratic 19,373. The 51st had been Republican 29,921, Democratic 26,587.
The party’s state chair is a former United Auto Workers official who says he has never been a Democrat. However, he refuses to say who funded the petition drive, and most observers believe that it was funded by someone whose motivation is to help Democratic nominees. The Tea Party pressure groups in Michigan say they had nothing to do with the petition drive.
The petition requirement this year in Michigan is 38,024. This is the first petition to place a previously unqualified party on the ballot in Michigan since 2002. Michigan makes it easy for a ballot-qualified party to remain qualified, so it is extremely likely that the Tea Party will also be on the ballot in 2012. Parties must poll a number of votes equal to 1% of the winning Secretary of State’s vote total, and it is unheard of for any ballot-qualified party that runs for Board of Regents, or Board of Education, to fail to poll that number of votes for those offices. The formula usually requires about 20,000 votes. Voters are more willing to vote for minor party nominees for unimportant statewide office, such as Board of Trustees or Board of Education. Thanks to Bill Hall for this news. The other ballot-qualified minor parties in Michigan are Constitution (still called U.S. Taxpayers in that state), Green, Libertarian, and Natural Law.
Separate is NOT equal.
Brown v. Bd of Ed 1954
— even in Michigan — one of the very few statewide 2 party regimes — with about 10 percent of the legislature gerrymander seats being actually somewhat competitive.
Many State legislatures — near zero competitive seats.
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This is a Democrat hoax. A progressive company got all the signatures and a UAW member submitted it all. Democrats can not win on their own so they are trying to pull votes from the Republicans.