(concurring). I concur in the majority opinion. However, I write separately to address a foundational issue developed during oral argument.
Plaintiffs in both Marposs Corp v City of Troy, 204 Mich App 156; 514 NW2d 202 (1994), and the initial case in this action, Bendix Safety Restraints Group, Allied Signal, Inc v City of Troy, 211 Mich App 801; 537 NW2d 459 (1995), assert that the statutory scheme in issue, MCL 207.551 et seq.; MSA 7.800(1) et seq., is an unconstitutional delegation of power by the Legislature to the City of Troy, a position that the majority today has properly refuted. In Marposs, however, this Court suggested that even if the delegation of power were constitutional, the City of Troy’s actions were, nonetheless, either "arbitrary and capricious” or constituted an abuse of discretion. Plaintiff in the present case, taking its cue from Marposs, has also advanced this argument. While this contention is no more persuasive than the delegation challenge, it raises a significantly different issue, namely, that of separation of powers.
The statute in question, MCL 207.559(2)(f); MSA 7.800(9)(2)(f), precludes a municipality acquiring an eligible facility from granting a tax abatement without the consent of the municipality "losing” an earlier incarnation of that facility. If the "losing” municipality withholds its consent, "a copy of the resolution of denial showing reasons for the denial shall be filed within 20 days after adoption with the department of commerce.”
While the statute requires that reasons be furnished in support of a denial of consent, it does not limit the basis on which such denial may be predi*293cated. For example, the Legislature did not specify that the reasons must be related to some relevant criterion, such as the economic condition of either of the municipalities involved or of their respective regions. Thus, no mandate that the grounds for denial be "reasonable” can be judicially inferred.1
We, accordingly, have no occasion to examine the reasons proffered by the City of Troy for its denial of consent to the abatements at issue. We note in passing that the City of Troy has chosen to focus on whether the acquiring municipality is or is not "economically depressed.” However, it would be temerarious for the judiciary to purport either to grant to or to withhold from such reasoning its imprimatur, except to note that the reasoning does not facially run afoul of any constitutional prohibition or concern.
However, plaintiff vehemently argues that it is this Court’s responsibility to review the City of Troy’s reasons for refusing to consent to the tax abatement. Plaintiff’s argument is in three parts. First, plaintiff contends that the Legislature’s sole intent in enacting the consent provision of MCL 207.559(2)(f); MSA 7.800(9X2X0 was to permit a city to discourage proposed moves that the city determined would adversely affect its local economy. Second, a city’s reasons for withholding its consent "must,” in accordance with the Legislature’s intent, be founded upon the detrimental economic effect that the city would likely suffer should it consent to the abatement. Third, because the City of Troy’s reasons for refusing to consent *294to the tax abatement do not address the economic effect on the City of Troy itself, the City of Troy is claimed to have abused its discretion or, in the alternative, to have predicated its abatement decision on grounds that are "arbitrary and capricious.”
Const 1963, art 3, § 2 establishes as an explicit principle of state constitutional government the separation of powers doctrine. This principle, which lies at the heart of republican government, is only implicit in the federal constitution, although as effectually important as if expressly delineated. Prize Cases, 67 US (2 Black) 635; 17 L Ed 459 (1863); Plaut v Spendthrift Farm, Inc, 514 US —; 115 S Ct 1447; 131 L Ed 2d 328 (1995).
A corollary to the separation of powers principle is the political question doctrine, which requires analysis of three inquiries: (1) Does the issue involve resolution of questions committed by the text of the constitution to the legislative or executive branches of government? (2) Would resolution of the question demand that the court move beyond areas of judicial expertise? (3) Do considerations for maintaining comity between the coordinate branches of government counsel against judicial intervention? House Speaker v Governor, 443 Mich 560, 574; 506 NW2d 190 (1993).
With respect to the first inquiry, questions of tax policy are committed by the text of the Michigan Constitution to the Legislature. First, Const 1963, art 4, § 1 vests the legislative power of the State of Michigan in a Senate and a House of Representatives. Const 1963, art 4, § 32 specifies the manner in which the Legislature shall enact laws imposing, continuing, or reviving taxes. Const 1963, art 9, § 2 bars the Legislature from surrendering, suspending, or contracting away the power of taxation. The judiciary is nowhere mentioned in these *295constitutional provisions, nor does Const 1963, art 6, the judicial article, confer on the judicial branch any power in the sphere of taxation. Accordingly, the mechanisms by which tax exemptions or abatements shall be granted or withheld are plainly committed by the text of the constitution to legislative resolution.
Concerning the second phase of the inquiry, the judiciary certainly possesses no special expertise in matters of tax policy. While the judiciary is frequently called upon to construe tax legislation or to determine the scope and effect of various provisions of Const. 1963, art 9, such judicial involvement is purely adjudicative.
In this case, however, Bendix asks the Court to consider the wisdom of the action of the City of Troy’s withholding of its consent to allow the City of Sterling Heights to provide an incentive to Bendix to relocate its facilities by extending a tax abatement. Even the purely economic aspects of the issues thus raised are outside the expertise of the judiciary, while the weighing of the noneconomic aspects — the relative bargaining power of each of the parties, their stomach for a fight, their tenacity should impasse erupt , into disagreement, the ability of the negotiators to perceive both the actual strengths and weaknesses of the other side’s position and to evaluate the correlative perceptions by the other side, and the possibility of economically irrational behavior in pursuit of both economic and noneconomic principles — are matters far beyond the arena of judicial expertise.
Finally, prudential considerations militate most strongly against judicial intervention. We are not called upon to construe a statute or a constitutional provision, but, instead, to grant judicial oversight of legislative action on the basis of a standard of review — "arbitrary and capricious”— *296that fairly invites disrespect for the political, and thus nonjusticiable, choices made by the local legislative body.
In effect, Bendix is suing to reverse the outcome of a political battle that it lost. See House Speaker v State Administrative Bd, 441 Mich 547, 561; 495 NW2d 539 (1993). Political battles, however, are fought, won, and lost in the political arena, and the judiciary has no right under the constitution to reposition the competitors, change the rules, or alter the outcome after the fact.
Less than two decades ago, the Michigan judiciary experimented with treating the actions of municipal legislative bodies as something other than legislative action. Creating a fiction that in some respects local legislative bodies, because they make an effort to find facts and apply legal standards, seem to be acting like quasi-judicial administrative bodies, the judiciary extended its reach and began reviewing such action without consideration of separation of powers principles. This brief experiment was a total failure, and the courts soon reverted to a properly deferential approach to these legislative decisions, arrogating the power of review only with respect to claims that such legislative action violated some clear and established constitutional norm. Ed Zaagman, Inc v Kentwood, 406 Mich 137; 277 NW2d 475 (1979).
No claim has been made by Bendix in this case that, in refusing to consent to the granting of a tax abatement by the City of Sterling Heights, the Troy City Council has violated some clear and established constitutional norm. For example, there is no assertion that the Troy City Council was adversely influenced by the race, religious affiliation, gender, or national origin of the principal corporate officers or shareholders of Bendix, or by any similar demographic data concerning the *297City of Sterling Heights. Cf. Gomillion v Lightfoot, 364 US 339, 347-348; 81 S Ct 125; 5 L Ed 2d 110 (1960), where the United States Supreme Court addressed a situation in which " 'acts generally lawful may become unlawful when done to accomplish an unlawful end . . . and a constitutional power cannot be used by way of condition to obtain an unconstitutional result.’ ” (Citations omitted.)
When it comes to legislative actions, the judiciary has no brief that entitles it to strike down a statute as arbitrary and capricious or an abuse of discretion. The principle of judicial review of the constitutionality of legislation established in Marbury v Madison, 5 US (1 Cranch) 137; 2 L Ed 60 (1803), is constrained by the requirement that some specific provision of the constitution be violated before a statute will be struck down. C F Smith Co v Fitzgerald, 270 Mich 659, 667; 259 NW 352 (1935), app dis sub nom C F Smith Co v Atwood, 296 US 659; 56 S Ct 115; 80 L Ed 470 (1935). Absent breach of some applicable clause of the state or federal constitution, the legislative power of the state is as broad, comprehensive, absolute, and unlimited as that of the Parliament of England. Young v Ann Arbor, 267 Mich 241, 243; 255 NW 579 (1934).2
*298Bendix takes issue with the Troy City Council’s failure to proffer "pertinent” reasons, as Bendix describes them, for withholding its consent to the abatement. However, in contrast to quasi-judicial administrative agencies, which are required to furnish a statement of facts determined and legal principles applied sufficient to show the agency’s reasoning and rationale for a decision, Nunn v George A Cantrick Co, Inc, 113 Mich App 486, 491-492; 317 NW2d 331 (1982), a legislative body need not provide reasons for its actions. Moreover, even where a legislative body gratuitously allows insight into its decision-making process in a particular instance, if the reasons underlying its decision are invalid but other conceivable reasons might have been adduced in support of such action that would be valid, the courts are obligated to presume the latter motivation and uphold the legislative choice. Wiles v Liquor Control Comm, 59 Mich App 321, 324; 229 NW2d 434 (1975).
It may be the case that the decision of the Troy City Council in this regard was made, not in consideration of the overall economic health of Michigan, or of Southeast Michigan, or even of the City of Troy, but on the basis of pedestrian, local, or even petty considerations.3 That is the risk and the genius of legislative action in a representative government. The remedy for a decision that is unwise or impolitic is not judicial review, but, like the offending decision itself, political, involving a *299resort to the ballot box or more intensive lobbying activity.
This principle was long ago recognized by Chief Justice Marshall on behalf of a unanimous Court in Gibbons v Ogden, 22 US (9 Wheat) 1, 197; 6 L Ed 23 (1824):
The wisdom and the discretion of [the legislature, its] identity with the people, and the influence which [legislators’] constituents possess at election, are, in this, as in many other instances, as that, for example, of declaring war, the sole restraints on which they have relied, to secure them from its abuse. They are the restraints on which the people must often rely solely, in all representative governments.
Judicial misgivings regarding the wisdom of legislative policy do not provide a legal foundation for overriding legislative decisions. The wisdom of such policies is a political question to be resolved in a political forum. People v Morris, 450 Mich 316, 335; 537 NW2d 842 (1995). Merely because a decision may be an outgrowth of political posturing provides the judiciary with no warrant to fashion a remedy beyond that crafted by the Legislature. Not every perceived wrong necessarily has a judicial remedy. Grand Traverse Co v Michigan, 450 Mich 457, 469; 538 NW2d 1 (1995).
Accordingly, no judicially cognizable interest of Bendix was violated when the Tróy City Council failed to state other than political reasons in support of its decision to withhold its consent to the granting of a tax abatement by the City of Sterling Heights. In lieu of disallowing all tax abatements for Michigan business enterprises that seek to relocate within the state rather than establish new facilities outside the state, the Legislature has balanced the need to compete with the fiscal lar*300gess of other states against the dangers of creating an economic merry-go-round within the state as enterprises move from one municipality to another simply to avoid paying taxes that support government services that benefit all. Because the Legislature has struck that balance, the local legislative body of the municipality losing a commercial facility must consent to the granting of a tax abatement for relocation of that facility to another municipality. Whether the Troy City Council was motivated by good reasons or bad, by compelling logic or sophistry, by considerations of the public good, or by parochial or even private considerations, is no concern of the judiciary, for the state Legislature must have anticipated such outcomes when it designed the abatement process in this fashion.
If the result is unpalatable or nonutilitarian, the remedy lies in a return to the Legislature for presentation of these arguments. This Court, lacking power to consider such questions, would be imprudent to entertain them substantively and impudent to express any opinion upon them. Pursuant to Const 1963, art 3, § 2, the judiciary has no legislative powers, and, thus, it cannot act as a "super legislature” to sit in review of the policy choices made by coordinate branches of government acting within their spheres of responsibility.
Markey, J., concurred.The fact that such reasons are to be reported, not to the affected municipality or to the enterprise seeking the abatement, but to the Department of Commerce, indicates that the Legislature chose to record the various rationales merely to furnish itself with a ready database on which it may, if it chooses, predicate future legislation in the area of tax policy.
In Judge Taylor’s dissent in Marposs, supra, it is intimated that, in this situation, the City of Troy cannot arbitrarily and unreasonably withhold' its consent. 204 Mich App 166, citing Union Twp v Mt Pleasant, 381 Mich 82, 89-90; 158 NW2d 905 (1968). What was obviously meant is that the Legislature may so delimit the scope of municipal discretion; he went on to opine that the City of Troy’s proffered rationale was not inconsistent with the Technology Park Development Act, MCL 207.701 et seq.; MSA 7.800(101) et seq.
Union Twp, supra, p 90 cites People ex rel Maybury v Mutual Gas-Light Co of Detroit, 38 Mich 154, 155 (1878), which in turn was a case in which the controlling statute delegated to municipalities the authority to consent to the use of public ways for the laying of utility pipes, subject to "such reasonable regulations as they may prescribe.”
Plaintiff may well be correct in concluding that the City of Troy’s reasons for failing to consent to the tax abatement are "political” and do not relate to the economic effect on the City of Troy. Plaintiff is also correct in asserting that the City of Troy "looks solely to the economic conditions of the city seeking to issue the abatement with no consideration whatsoever given to the economic effect on the City of Troy.” Similarly, none dispute that the City of Troy’s 1986 policy resolution expressly mandates this result. However, none of these arguments grant the judiciary jurisdiction to review political decisions of a legislative body.