If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
GOVERNOR GRETCHEN WHITMER, FOR PUBLICATION
May 27, 2021
Appellant, 9:05 a.m.
V No. 354474
Board of State Canvassers
BOARD OF STATE CANVASSERS and JAMES LC No. 00-000000
MAKOWSKI,
Appellees.
GOVERNOR GRETCHEN WHITMER,
Appellant,
v No. 354475
Board of State Canvassers
BOARD OF STATE CANVASSERS and BRENDA LC No. 00-000000
LACHAPPELLE,
Appellees.
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR GARLIN
GILCHRIST II,
Appellant,
v No. 354582
Board of State Canvassers
BOARD OF STATE CANVASSERS and CHAD LC No. 00-000000
BAASE,
Appellees.
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GOVERNOR GRETCHEN WHITMER,
Appellant,
v No. 354583
Board of State Canvassers
BOARD OF STATE CANVASSERS and CHAD LC No. 00-000000
BAASE,
Appellees.
GOVERNOR GRETCHEN WHITMER,
Appellant,
v No. 354794
Board of State Canvassers
BOARD OF STATE CANVASSERS and JAMES LC No. 00-000000
MAKOWSKI,
Appellees.
GOVERNOR GRETCHEN WHITMER,
Appellant,
v No. 354795
Board of State Canvassers
BOARD OF STATE CANVASSERS and LC No. 00-000000
MICHAEL GARABELLI,
Appellees.
GOVERNOR GRETCHEN WHITMER,
Appellant,
v No. 354878
Board of State Canvassers
BOARD OF STATE CANVASSERS and JOHN LC No. 00-000000
PARKINSON,
Appellees.
-2-
Before: JANSEN, P.J., and RONAYNE KRAUSE and GADOLA, JJ.
JANSEN, P.J.
Each of these seven consolidated appeals1 as of right call for judicial review, in accordance
with the Michigan Election Law, MCL 168.1 et seq., as amended by 2012 PA 417. In each case,
the Board of State Canvassers approved for circulation petitions calling for the recall of appellants,
Governor Gretchen Whitmer and Lieutenant Governor Garlin Gilchrist II.
In Docket Nos. 354474, 354475, 354583, 354794, 354795, and 354878, Governor Whitmer
challenges petitions calling for her recall because of executive orders that she signed that were
intended to minimize the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the State of Michigan. We affirm
the Board of State Canvassers in the above six cases. However, in Docket No. 354457, we remand
for the ministerial purpose of allowing appellee, Brenda LaChappelle, to correct the scrivener’s
error in setting forth the date upon which the executive order at issue was signed.
In Docket No. 354582, Lieutenant Governor Gilchrist challenges a petition prepared in
response to his having signed, while the Governor was abroad, 2019 HB 4044, resulting in the
enactment of 2019 PA 124, which, among other things, amended the criteria for denying,
suspending, or placing on probation insurance producer licenses set forth in MCL 500.1239. We
affirm the Board of State Canvassers in this appeal.
I. BACKGROUND
We address each of the petitions filed in turn infra. However, we find it necessary to first
give a brief overview of the relevant jurisprudence concerning recall petitions. Const 1963, art 2,
§ 8, consists of the following:
Laws shall be enacted to provide for the recall of all elective officers except
judges of courts of record upon petition of electors equal in number to 25 percent
of the number of persons voting in the last preceding election for the office of
governor in the electoral district of the officer sought to be recalled. The sufficiency
of any statement of reasons or grounds procedurally required shall be a political
rather than a judicial question.
The Governor and Lieutenant Governor argue generally that the challenged petitions in
these cases did not adequately describe the authorities cited as reasons for the recall. Those parties
rely on Wallace v Tripp, 358 Mich 668; 101 NW2d 312 (1960), and Noel v Oakland Co Clerk, 92
Mich App 181, 187-188; 284 NW2d 761 (1979). In Noel, this Court, citing Wallace, stated that,
although “the sufficiency of the reasons in a recall petition is an electoral rather than a justiciable
1
See Governor Gretchen Whitmer v Board of State Canvassers, unpublished order of the Court of
Appeals, entered January 8, 2021 (Docket Nos. 354474, 354475, 354582, 354583, 354794,
354795, 354878).
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question, . . . the reasons . . . must be stated with adequate clarity . . . to prevent abuse of the
elective franchise by ensuring deliberate and informed action by those called upon to sign . . . ,
while . . . affording the official . . . some minimal due process . . . .” Noel, 92 Mich App at 187-
188, citing Wallace, 358 Mich at 676-678; MCL 168.966, repealed by 2012 PA 417.
In Dimas v Macomb Co Election Comm, 248 Mich App 624, 627-628; 639 NW2d 850
(2001), this Court, citing then-current provisions of the Michigan Election Law, stated:
The standard of review for clarity of recall petitions has been described as
both “lenient,” and “very lenient.” Thus, recall review by the courts should be very,
very limited. A meticulous and detailed statement of the charges against an
officeholder is not required. It is sufficient if an officeholder is apprised of the
course of conduct in office that is the basis of the recall drive, so that a defense can
be mounted regarding that conduct. Where the clarity of the reasons stated in the
petition is a close question, doubt should be resolved in favor of the individual
formulating the petition. [Selected quotation marks and citations omitted.]
Similarly, in Donigan v Oakland Co Election Comm, 279 Mich App 80; 755 NW2d 209 (2008),
this Court held that “truth itself is not a consideration in determining the clarity of recall petition
language,” because “[s]uch a determination is a political question for the voters, not the courts,”
and further held that the “same principle applies with regard to whether the language of the petition
sufficiently explains the nature of any legislation referred to within it.” Id. at 83-84 (quotation
marks and citations omitted).
After Dimas and Donigan were issued, the Legislature enacted 2012 PA 417, which
modified various provisions of the Michigan Election Law, and added to it MCL 168.951a. The
latter’s Subsection (1) sets forth the requirements for a recall petition, including, under Subdivision
(c), that it “[s]tate factually and clearly each reason for the recall,” and that each reason “be based
upon the officer’s conduct during his or her current term of office,” and adds that “[i]f any reason
for the recall is based on the officer’s conduct in connection with specific legislation, the reason
for the recall must not misrepresent the content of the specific legislation.” Subsection (2) requires
submission of such a petition to the Board of State Canvassers. Subsection (3) calls for the Board
to meet and “determine . . . whether each reason for the recall stated in the petition is factual and
of sufficient clarity to enable the officer whose recall is sought and the electors to identify the
course of conduct that is the basis for the recall,” and, if answering any of those questions
negatively, to reject the entire petition. Subsection (6) states that “[t]he determination by the board
of state canvassers may be appealed” to this Court “by the officer whose recall is sought or by the
sponsors of the recall petition drive.”
An article in the Michigan Bar Journal summarized some of the effects of the new
legislation:
On December 27, 2012, Public Act 417 took immediate effect, substantially
changing the way in which elected officials are recalled in Michigan. The
amendments clarify and make more uniform the process for recalling elected
officials. Uniformity is accomplished by creating consistency in interpretation,
placing recalls for all statewide (and some county) officeholders before the same
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body, requiring that the reasons stated for the recall be factual, and specifying the
periods during which a recall petition may be circulated, precluding multiple,
simultaneous recall petitions, etc.
To address concerns regarding inconsistent application of the Michigan
Election Law, the 2012 amendments now require petitions seeking the recall of
public officials to be submitted to the Board of State Canvassers before being
circulated. The board is a constitutionally created commission responsible for
canvassing petitions and election results, conducting recounts, and administering
elections in Michigan. . . .
The 2012 amendments also added a factuality requirement so that a petition
must now state the reasons for recall both “factually and clearly.” Although the
grounds for recall remain a political question, for the sake of avoiding voter
confusion in the present climate of relentless (and often intentionally misleading)
political advertisements, the legislature commanded that the ballot language itself
must be both factual and clear. [Hanselman, Total Recall: Balancing the Right to
Recall Elected Officials with the Orderly Operation of Government, Mich Bar J
(January, 2014), p 36 (citations and footnote omitted).]
This Court has held that “the Legislature included the terms ‘factual’ and ‘factually’ in
MCL 168.951a to ensure that the grounds set forth in a recall petition are stated in terms of a
factual occurrence.” Hooker v Moore, 326 Mich App 552, 555; 928 NW2d 287 (2018). Although
the statute requires that a reason for recall “be stated in the form of a factual assertion about the
official’s conduct,” it “does not specify . . . however, that the reason for the recall stated in the
petition must be truthful.” Hooker, 326 Mich App at 559. This is because such inquiry involves
the sufficiency or validity of the reason stated, which our state Constitution “plainly reserves . . .
to the electors.” Id. at 559, citing Const 1963, art 2, § 8.
These consolidated appeals occasion further application of the Michigan Election Law, as
amended by 2012 PA 417.2
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“[A]n elected officer whose recall is sought may appeal a determination by the Board [of
State Canvassers] in this Court for a determination concerning whether the reasons stated in the
petition are factual and of sufficient clarity.” Hooker, 326 Mich App at 555, citing MCL
168.951a(6). We acknowledge that the Governor and the Lieutenant Governor have asked this
Court to “clarify and confirm the standard of review applicable to recall petitions after the 2012
amendments to the Michigan Election Law[.]” We agree that the standard of review requires
clarification, and now confirm that this Court reviews questions of clarity of reasons presented in
recall petitions de novo, consistent with the appellate standard of review for the existence of
ambiguity in statutory language, Hooker, 326 Mich App at 558-559, or in contractual language.
2
The Michigan Election Law, including certain provisions of 2012 PA 417, was also amended by
2018 PA 190, but not in ways bearing on any of the issues raised in these appeals.
-5-
See Barton-Spencer v Farm Bureau Life Ins Co of Mich, 500 Mich 32, 39; 892 NW2d 794 (2017).
Additionally, we confirm that the issue of misrepresentation of legislation, or other textual
authority, presents a factual question that we review for clear error. See MCR 2.613(C).
III. ANALYSIS
A. DOCKET NO. 354474
In Docket No. 354474, James Makowski submitted a recall petition to the Board of State
Canvassers to recall the Governor, citing the fact that “Gretchen Whitmer issued Executive Order
2020-143 on July 1, 2020 closing indoor service at bars.” On appeal, the Governor argues that
“while the reason stated in the [p]etition is stated as a fact, the Board [of State Canvassers] erred
in concluding that the stated reason was sufficiently clear, did not misrepresent the content of the
executive order referenced in the [p]etition, and described a course of conduct by Governor
Whitmer.” Thus, according to the Governor, the Board of State Canvassers erred by approving
the subject recall petition for circulation.
Executive Order 2020-143 is subtitled “Closing indoor service at bars.” It summarizes the
history of related executive orders, including judicial challenges, invokes statutory and
constitutional authority for each executive action, and recites continuing concerns for the spread
of COVID-19. The order then states:
this order closes bars and nightclubs for indoor service in those regions that are in
Phase 4 of the Michigan Safe Start Plan. Restaurants can remain open for indoor
service, but alcohol can be served only to patrons who are seated at socially
distanced tables. Common areas where people stand and congregate within
restaurants must be closed. Restaurants and bars may remain open for outdoor
seating, but only for seated customers at socially distanced tables.
The order then sets forth several enumerated paragraphs of particulars regarding restrictions
imposed and facilities or services implicated. Executive Order 2020-143 was rescinded by
Executive Order 2020-160 on July 31, 2020.
The Governor first argues that the petition lacks clarity because it uses ambiguous and
undefined terms, particularly with its reference to “bars.” The Governor argues that the word
“bars” is ambiguous because dictionaries define the term not only as an establishment that sells
alcoholic beverages, but also as a counter at which food or beverages are served, or a shop that
sells nonalcoholic beverages, such as coffee. The Governor maintains that where “electors are left
to guess at [the] type of ‘bar’ the [p]etition refers to, the [p]etition lack[s] sufficient clarity and is
noncompliant with the Michigan Election Law.” We reject this argument. Any person invited
to sign the petition would very likely envision a reference to a conventional tavern, where people
can purchase and consume alcoholic beverages, when faced with the wording, “closing indoor
service at bars.” This is particularly so when the word is taken in context, used as it is in
connection with the related terms “nightclubs” and “restaurants,” strongly suggesting that the term
“bars” refers to an establishment, like a nightclub and like many restaurants, that serves alcoholic
beverages.
-6-
The Governor next argues that the petition language misrepresents Executive Order 2020-
143 by stating only generally that the order closed indoor service at bars, when in fact the order
was much more particular in its scope. Indeed, MCL 168.951a(1)(c) states that, “[i]f any reason
for the recall is based on the officer’s conduct in connection with specific legislation, the reason
for the recall must not misrepresent the content of the specific legislation.” However, this appeal,
and with the exception of Docket No. 354582, all the other consolidated appeals, involve executive
orders–not legislation.
Recently, albeit in an unpublished, and thus nonbinding3, opinion, this Court concluded as
follows: “We hold that MCL 168.951a(1)(c) does not apply to the executive order descriptions
because they are not legislation.” Governor v Bd of State Canvassers, unpublished per curiam
opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued December 3, 2020 (Docket No. 353878). We agree with
this Court’s previous determination, and affirm it now. We specifically affirm the following
conclusion of this Court:
Although certain limited executive orders effectively become legislation when the
Legislature does not timely object, Aguirre v Michigan, 315 Mich App 706, 715 n
4; 891 NW2d 516 (2016), those are limited to executive orders transferring powers
between executive branch departments, or creating new departments. Const 1963,
art 5, § 2. See Mich Mut Ins Co v Dir Dep't of Consumer and Indus Servs, 246 Mich
App 227, 236-237; 632 NW2d 500 (2001). The listed executive orders did not
transfer statutory duties amongst executive departments, and were not issued
pursuant to Const. 1963, art. 5, § 2. [Governor v Board of State Canvassers, unpub
op at 4 n 1.]
Thus, we conclude that Executive Order 2020-143 is not legislation, and therefore is not subject
to the requirements found in MCL 168.951a(1)(c). Accordingly, we reject the Governor’s
challenge to the petition on the basis that the petition contains misrepresentations of the scope of
Executive Order 2020-143.
Finally, the Governor argues that the petition fails to put forth a valid reason for the recall
because it describes only a single act, and not a course of conduct. Again, we disagree. MCL
168.951a(3) provides, in relevant part, that the Board of Canvassers must “determine . . . whether
each reason for the recall stated in the petition is . . . of sufficient clarity to enable the officer whose
recall is sought and the electors to identify the course of conduct that is the basis for the recall.”
The Governor argues that “the Legislature did not require mere ‘conduct’,” but rather “a ‘course
of conduct’ with respect to recall petitions, meaning that a single action (such as the signing of one
executive order) would not meet the requirements of the Michigan Election Law.”
In support of her position, the Governor points to the aggravated stalking statute, MCL
750.411i(a), which defines a “course of conduct” as “a pattern of conduct composed of a series of
3
See MCR 7.215(C)(1), which provides that unpublished decisions of this Court are not
precedentially binding under principles of state decisis. They may, however, be consulted as
persuasive authority. Hicks v EPI Printers, Inc, 267 Mich App 79, 87 n 1; 702 NW2d 883 (2005).
-7-
2 or more separate noncontinuous acts evidencing a continuity of purpose.” However, we
conclude that the Criminal Code’s definition of stalking, which by its nature involves more than
an isolated unwelcome gesture, is not instructive or conclusive in the present application.
Indeed, MCL 168.951a(1)(c) includes, among the requirements for a recall petition, that
the stated reasons for recall must be “based upon the officer’s conduct during his or her current
term of office” and recognizes that such a reason may be “based on the officer’s conduct in
connection with specific legislation,” implying no need to distinguish an isolated act from a series
of actions. Accordingly, we conclude that targeted “conduct” for that purpose may be a course of
conduct, or a single action. Further, because MCL 168.951a(3) refers to Subsection (1) in the
course of directing the Board of State Canvassers to review petitions for conformance with
Subsection (3), we will not add to those requirements. See Ally Fin Inc v State Treasurer, 502
Mich 484, 493; 918 NW2d 662 (2018) (statutory interpretation requires examination of the statute
“as a whole, reading individual words and phrases in the context of the entire legislative scheme,”
and therefore this Court must consider the text “in view of its structure and of the physical and
logical relation of its many parts”) (quotation marks and citations omitted). On the basis of the
foregoing, we conclude that the term “course of conduct” as used in Subsection (3) is neither a
limitation on grounds for recall, nor a requirement for petition language. Rather, the requirement
that the Board of State Canvassers review the reasons stated in recall petitions for clarity is broadly
worded in order to cover a succession of related actions along with individual actions.
Moreover, we briefly note the Governor’s argument that the signing of a single executive
order constitutes a single act, as opposed to a course of conduct, and thus cannot be the basis for a
recall petition, would mean reading the challenged petition language so literally as to exclude from
consideration any action that the Governor took in connection with the issuance of the order cited
but for signing her name (e.g., research, consultations, or deliberations leading up to the signing
of the order). If the use of the term “course of conduct” in MCL 168.951a(3) disqualifies isolated
actions as legitimate reasons for a recall, presumably few of a governor’s official acts would
qualify, and such a result cannot stand.4
On the basis of the foregoing, we conclude that the Board of State Canvassers correctly
approved the petition at issue in this appeal.
B. DOCKET NO. 354475
In Docket No. 354475, Brenda LaChappelle submitted a recall petition to the Board of
State Canvassers to recall the Governor, citing Executive Order 2020-38. The sole reason provided
by LaChappelle for recalling the Governor was that “Gretchen Whitmer signed [E]xecutive
[O]rder 2020-38 (Covid-19) on April 1, 2020.” On appeal, the Governor raises several of the same
arguments we rejected supra in Docket No. 354474.
4
Additionally, were we to accept the Governor’s position that a single act does not constitute a
“course of conduct” that may form the basis of a recall petition, this would, for example, immunize
an elected official who might accept a single bribe from being recalled for that conduct. That
cannot be a plausible understanding of the relevant constitutional and statutory provisions.
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Executive Order 2020-38 was signed by the Governor on April 5, 2020, and is subtitled
“Temporary extensions of certain FOIA deadlines to facilitate COVID-19 emergency response
efforts.” Executive Order 2020-38 was rescinded by Executive Order 2020-112 on June 11, 2020.
Citing MCL 168.951a(3), the Governor argues that the challenged petition is deficient
because it mentions the signing of a single executive order, failing to describe a “course of
conduct.” The parties also disagree on whether the requirement in MCL 168.951a(1)(c) that a
petition referencing specific legislation must not misrepresent that specific legislation extends to
executive orders. For the reasons stated supra, we reject the Governor’s argument that a petition
must describe a course of conduct as opposed to an individual act, and conclude that MCL
168.951a(1)(c) does not extend to the executive orders at issue in these appeals.
We do, however, find it necessary to address the Governor’s argument that LaChappelle’s
failure to list the correct signing date of Executive Order 2020-38 violates the requirement of MCL
168.951a(1)(c) that recall reasons be stated “factually.” This issue is unpreserved because it was
not raised below. However, this Court retains the authority to decide an unpreserved issue if it
concerns a question of law and all the facts necessary for its resolution have been presented.
Vushaj v Garm Bureau Gen Ins Co of Mich, 284 Mich App 513, 519; 773 NW2d 758 (2009).
Unpreserved claims of error are reviewed for plain error affecting substantial rights. Cove Creek
Condo Ass’n v Vistal Land & Home Development, LLC, 330 Mich App 679, 696; 950 NW2d 502
(2019).
Indeed, the statute requires that a reason for a recall “be stated in the form of a factual
assertion about the official’s conduct,” but “not . . that the reason . . . be truthful.” Hooker, 326
Mich App at 559. Stating that the Governor signed an executive order on a specified date is a
factual assertion, whether or not the date specified is correct. The Governor argues that “[t]he
effective dates of laws and regulations are a material term,” and because the sole reason for recall
misstates the signing date of the executive order cited in the petition, it must “be rejected as non-
compliant under the Michigan Election Law.” We disagree, and conclude that mistaking the date
as the first day, instead of the fifth day, of a particular month was not sufficiently wayward to
invalidate the petition on the ground that the reason for recall is not clear. Indeed, if the petition
had said “on or about April 1” instead of “on April 1, 2020,” few would be concerned that referring
to a date four days ahead of the mark would cause any confusion for the electors or the Governor
concerning which executive order, which was correctly identified by its number, prompted the
recall petition.
Because a plain error has been exposed, we remand this matter to the Board of State
Canvassers for the ministerial task of allowing LaChappelle to correct what should be deemed a
mere scrivener’s error. See People v Gioglio (On Remand), 296 Mich App 12, 17; 815 NW2d 589
(2012), vacated in part on other grounds 493 Mich 864 (2012) (“This Court is an error-correcting
court that has broad authority to take corrective action with regard to lower court proceedings.”);
MCR 7.216(A)(7)(1) (this Court may “exercise any or all of the powers of amendment of the trial
court or tribunal”); MCR 7.216(A)(7)(4) (this Court may permit corrections or additions to the
transcript or record); and MCR 7.216(A)(7)(7) (this Court may “enter any judgment or order or
grant further or different relief as the case may require.”).
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On the basis of the foregoing, we conclude that the Board of State Canvassers correctly
approved the petition at issue in this appeal.
C. DOCKET NO. 354583
In Docket No. 354583, Chad Baase submitted a petition to the Board of State Canvassers
to recall the Governor, providing as reasons for the recall that the Governor had “sign[ed]
Executive Order 2020-04, Declaration of Emergency, on March 10, 2020, and also for signing
Executive Order 2020-67, Declaration of state of emergency under the Emergency Powers of the
Governor Act, 1945 PA 302, on April 30, 2020.” On appeal, the Governor claims that the Board
of State Canvassers erred by approving the petition for circulation, arguing that the recall reasons
provided do not name the officer whose recall is sought, and do not adequately describe the
legislation to which they refer.
First, we reject the Governor’s argument that the petition does not adequately describe the
legislation to which it refers, because we concluded supra in Docket No. 354474 that MCL
168.951a(1)(c) does not extend to the executive orders at issue in these appeals.
We also reject the Governor’s argument that the petition did not adequately identify the
officer whose recall is sought. The Governor argues that the provision in MCL 168.951a(1)(c)
that “[e]ach reason for the recall must be based upon the officer’s conduct during his or her current
term of office,” and the requirement in MCL 168.951a(3) that the Board of State Canvassers
determine “whether each reason for the recall stated in the petition is factual and of sufficient
clarity to enable the officer whose recall is sought and the electors to identify the course of conduct
that is the basis for the recall,” require that each reason set forth in a recall petition must
independently identify the officer involved. The Governor argues that where she was only
identified by name and title in the petition form where it called for that information, but Baase did
not repeat her name and title within the wording of the reason for the recall, the petition should
have been invalidated. We reject this argument as it is unpersuasive.
Baase used the petition form approved by the Director of Elections. As this Court has
previously noted, “[n]othing within MCL 168.951a(3) precludes the Board [of State Canvassers]
from considering the information before the word ‘reason(s)’ when deciding whether the reasons
for recall are clear,” and that “[e]lectors will read the entire sentence, which includes the officer’s
name and title,” when considering the petition. Governor v Bd of State Canvassers, unpub op at 3.
Indeed, the approved form was designed to highlight the name and office involved in the recall
effort, and not to require unnecessary repetition of that basic information within each separately
stated reason for recall. We therefore conclude that the petition is not to be reviewed as narrowly
as the Governor suggests, and that the Board of State Canvassers did not err by considering the
entire petition when considering whether to approve it.
On the basis of the foregoing, we conclude that the Board of State Canvassers correctly
approved the petition at issue in this appeal.
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D. DOCKET NO. 354794
In Docket No. 354794, Makowski submitted a petition to the Board of State Canvassers to
recall the Governor, giving as a reason for the recall:
In April, 2020, Gretchen Whitmer issued Executive Order 2020-50, which required,
in part, “A nursing home with a census below 80% must create a unit dedicated to
the care of COVID-19-affected residents (“dedicated unit”) and must provide
appropriate PPE, as available, to direct-care employees who staff the dedicated unit.
A nursing home provider that operates multiple facilities may create a dedicated
unit by dedicating a facility for such a purpose.”
The salient feature of this appeal is that the Governor asserts that some nonsensical or
indecipherable characters appear within the petition language: “The Petition, as submitted, only
states that Governor Whitmer ‘issued Executive Order 2020.’ What follows is a series of
indiscernible ellipses/dots followed by a quote.” The Governor follows this assertion with a
graphic representing a detail of her reproduction of the petition, featuring what appears to be a
random array of gray dots separating “Gretchen Whitmer issued Executive Order 2020-” and “ ’A
nursing home . . .’ .” The Board of State Canvassers retorts that “[t]he copy of the recall petition
attached to her brief as Exhibit 1, however, does identify the order by number and does not include
any ellipses.”
For context, we provide a screenshot of the document in question:
It appears that the gibberish of which the Governor complains is but an occasional irregularity
bound up with the processing of electronic documents. The Board of Canvassers’ own advocacy
suggests that it never encountered the puzzling stray characters, and our review of the record in
this case turned up no indication that the Board’s deliberations were hampered by, or even included
any acknowledgment of, any such irregularity. Indeed, when tasked with experimenting with the
zoom level, this Court determined that normal prose came into view where gibberish had earlier
appeared.
We conclude that although the Governor relied on the appearance of a string of nonsensical
characters to support her challenge to the clarity of the petition language, the Governor’s hasty
conclusion about a word-processing irregularity does not arise often enough to compel reading the
petition as featuring some gibberish in place of several normal characters that appear the rest of
the time.
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The Governor further argues that the petition at issue is deficient because it mentions the
signing of a single executive order rather than a course of conduct. The parties also again disagree
on whether the requirement in MCL 168.951a(1)(c) that a petition referencing specific legislation
must not misrepresent that specific legislation extends to executive orders. For the reasons stated
supra, we reject the Governor’s argument that a petition must describe a course of conduct as
opposed to an individual act, and conclude that MCL 168.951a(1)(c) does not extend to the
executive orders at issue in these appeals.
On the basis of the foregoing, we conclude that the Board of State Canvassers correctly
approved the petition at issue in this appeal.
E. DOCKET NO. 354795
In Docket No. 354795, Michael Garabelli submitted a petition to the Board of State
Canvassers to recall the Governor, giving the following as a reason for the recall:
1) For signing in April of 2020, Executive Order 2020-50, Enhanced protections
for residents and staff of long-term care facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic
2) For saying the following regarding a question about the April 15, 2020 rally,
“Operation Gridlock,” during an April 13, 2020 News Conference on COVID-19:
“I hope that as people are looking at social media they are dispelling and taking on
the dissemination of demonstrably inaccurate information. I also would just say, I
think it is this group is funded in a large part by the DeVos family and I think it’s
really inappropriate for a sitting member of the United States President’s cabinet to
be waging political attacks on any governor, but obviously on me here at home.”
3) For signing in March of 2020, Executive Order 2020-17, Temporary restrictions
on on [sic] non-essential medical and dental procedures, which included the
following language: “A plan for a covered facility that performs medical procedures
should exclude from postponement surgeries related to advanced cardiovascular
disease (including coronary artery disease, heart failure, and arrhythmias) that
would prolong life; oncological testing, treatment, and related procedures;
pregnancy-related visits and procedures; labor and delivery; organ transplantation;
and procedures related to dialysis.”
On appeal, the Governor claims the Board of State Canvassers erred in approving the petition for
circulation because the recall reasons provided do not themselves name the officer whose recall is
sought, that the petition does not describe a course of conduct, that the second reason stated in the
petition presents a misquotation and otherwise lacks clarity, and because the first and third reasons
do not adequately describe the legislation to which they refer.
First, for the reasons stated supra, we reject the Governor’s argument that a petition must
describe a course of conduct, that the petition did not adequately identify the officer whose recall
is sought, and conclude that MCL 168.951a(1)(c) does not extend to the executive order at issue
in this appeal. Next, we address the Governor’s argument that the petition includes misquotations,
and otherwise lacks clarity.
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First, the Governor attacks the reasons for the recall petition on the grounds that the petition
misquotes what she said at a press conference. The Governor offers this side-by-side comparison:
The Governor also invites the reader to search for the pertinent audio at
https://www.rev.com/blog/transcripts/michigan-governor-gretchen-whitmer-press-conference-
transcript-april-13. However, the Governor thus encourages this Court to engage in precisely the
sort of review for accuracy that our state Constitution reserves to the electorate. See Hooker, 326
Mich App at 559-560, citing Const 1963, art 2, § 8. Accordingly, we decline to entertain this
argument on the ground that only the electorate is legally competent to decide such things.5
Next, the Governor challenges the clarity of the first recall reason on the ground that, after
specifying an executive order and its approximate signing date, “What follows is an indiscernible
series of words,” such that “[i]t is not clear . . . whether these words are the Petition sponsor’s
attempts at summarizing the content of Executive Order 2020-50 or something else entirely.” In
fact, the words thus challenged, “Enhanced protections for residents and staff of long-term care
facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic,” quote the subtitle of the order verbatim. We conclude
that contrary to the Governor’s position, the context of those words suggests that they describe the
executive order just cited. The Governor additionally argues that this wording lacks clarity
because it uses technical terms defined in the specified order, but not in the reason itself. Namely,
“long-term care facility,” for which Executive Order 2020-50 incorporates by reference a statutory
definition, which in turn implicates “home for the aged” and “adult foster care facility” as
statutorily defined. We conclude that a reference to the familiar concept of “long-term care
facilities” is not rendered unclear when offered as part of the general description of the impact of
an executive order, even though the actual legal implementation of the order naturally requires
carefully defining the particulars of that general term. Indeed, “long-term care facility” joins such
familiar terms as “driving under the influence,” “child abuse,” and “power of attorney” as not
being rendered unclear by the existence of precise statutory definitions that comport with common
understandings while refining the terminology for legal application.
The Governor argues that the third reason for recall lacks clarity because of the repetition
of the word “on” in its introductory sentence, on the ground that “[i]t is unclear to electors whether
the use of ‘on’ twice is mere accident by the Petition’s sponsor or whether it is part of the Executive
5
It furthermore appears obvious to us that the written transcript of the Governor’s remarks is error-
riddled - “number” vs “member” and “political tax” vs “political attacks” - and that the petition is
very likely a more accurate representation of what the Governor actually said.
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Order referenced.” However, it appears to this Court that the repeated “on” was obviously mere
inadvertence, and the typographical error was acknowledged in the proceedings below. Moreover,
because in the original petition the sentence wraps around to the next line after the first “on,” we
cannot conclude that many readers would even notice the repetition. It is likely that any reader
who might notice would recognize the obvious inadvertence, without concern for whether the
stenographic mishap originated with the petitioner or with the executive order referenced.
Regardless, the Governor does not suggest any alternative and misleading reading that would result
from thinking the repeated “on” intentional, and we cannot think of any. Accordingly, any reader
who might think the repeated “on” intentional might ponder the peculiar usage, but would not
glean from it any misapprehension of what is actually being conveyed.6
On the basis of the foregoing, we conclude that the Board of State Canvassers correctly
approved the petition at issue in this appeal.
F. DOCKET NO 354878
In Docket No. 354878, John Parkinson submitted three petitions to the Board of State
Canvassers to recall the Governor, giving as reasons for the recall that the Governor “signed
[E]xecutive [O]rder 2020-11 on March 16, 2020[;]” that the Governor “signed [E]xecutive [O]rder
2020-160 on July 29, 2020[;]” and that the Governor “signed [E]xecutive [O]rder 2020-69 on April
30, 2020.” On appeal, the Governor claims the Board of State Canvassers erred in approving the
petition for circulation because none of the petitions describe a course of conduct, and that the
petitions misrepresent by omission the executive orders specified because the petitions only cite
the executive order at issue rather than describing the contents of the orders.
On the basis of the reasons provided supra, we first reject the Governor’s argument that
the petitions were deficient for failing to describe a course of conduct. Next, the Governor argues
that the petition failed to describe the executive orders in sufficient detail, where only the executive
order number is provided, but not any information regarding the content of the executive orders.
It is possible that some potential signers would decline to sign the petition in light of the complete
lack of information about the substance of the targeted executive orders. However, neither
members of the Board of State Canvassers, nor this Court, have been asked to decide whether they
personally would be satisfied to sign a petition of such weighty significance when it bears such
limited information. In MCL 168.951a(1)(c), the Legislature demanded only that the reasons for
recall be presented factually and clearly, and that attendant legislation must not be misrepresented.
Accordingly, just as Const 1963, art 2, § 8 leaves the truth behind reasons for recall to the voters
to decide, the Legislature has left the sufficiency of the information provided for the potential
petition signers to decide. By adding MCL 168.951a to the Michigan Election Law, the Legislature
only minimally upgraded the information requirements for recall petitions. MCL 168.951a(1)(c)
does not call on petitioners to describe the pertinent legislation or executive order in detail, and
6
The Governor further protests that “without either fixing the error or clarifying that this is part of
the Executive Order, the third reason for recall is not sufficiently clear and should result in the
entire Petition being rejected.” We admit to feeling some astonishment that the Governor’s
advocate would endeavor to attach so much significance to a repeated preposition.
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therefore occasions no revision of the rule that a petition need not “fully explain the nature and
effect of the bills at issue.” Donigan, 279 Mich App at 84. The Governor’s insistence that more
information is needed than a bare citation of the executive orders at issue implies a duty of
elaboration that is without statutory foundation.
On the basis of the foregoing, we conclude that the Board of State Canvassers correctly
approved the petition at issue in this appeal.
G. DOCKET NO. 354582
In Docket No. 354582, Baase submitted a petition to recall the Lieutenant Governor to the
Board of State Canvassers, giving as a reason for the recall that the Lieutenant Governor
“SIGN[ED] HOUSE BILL 4044 INTO LAW ON NOVEMBER 21, 2019 WHILE GOVERNOR
GRETCHEN WHITMER WAS IN ISRAEL.” On appeal, the Lieutenant Governor argues that
the Board of State Canvassers erred by approving the petition for circulation because the petition
does not identify the officer whose recall is sought, the petition fails to describe a “course of
conduct” because it only refers to the singular act of signing a piece of legislation, and that the
petition does not adequately describe the legislation to which it refers. We disagree.
For context, we note that “HOUSE BILL 4044” refers to 2019 HB 4044, which was signed
and enacted into law as 2019 PA 124. Among other things, it amended the criteria for denying,
suspending, or placing on probation insurance producer licenses set forth in MCL 500.1239. It
also limited the consideration of felony convictions for this purpose to those committed “within
10 years before the uniform application was filed,” MCL 500.1239(1)(d), with certain exceptions,
and added the criteria now set forth in Subsection (1)(i) and Subsection (2). Thus, the recall
petition at issue in Docket No. 354582 does not pertain to the Governor’s or the Lieutenant
Governor’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
For the reasons stated supra, we reject the Lieutenant Governor’s argument that a petition
must describe a course of conduct as opposed to an individual act. Likewise, for the reasons stated
supra, we reject the Lieutenant Governor’s arguments that the petition for his recall is deficient
because he was only identified in the petition form where it called for that information but not in
the wording of the reason for the recall, and that the petition was deficient for failing to describe
the contents of 2019 HB 4044.
On the basis of the foregoing, we conclude that the Board of State Canvassers correctly
approved the petition at issue in this appeal.
IV. CONCLUSION
In Docket Nos. 354474, 354475, 354583, 354794, 354795, 354878, and 354582, we affirm.
However, in Docket No. 354457, we remand for the ministerial purpose task of allowing
LaChappelle to correct the scrivener’s error in setting forth the date upon which the executive
order at issue was signed. We do not retain jurisdiction.
/s/ Kathleen Jansen
/s/ Michael F. Gadola
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