Kyle Davidson, Michigan Advance

Potential double voting under investigation in Michigan county after Aug. 6 primary

Four individuals in St. Clair Shores are under investigation for possible double voting, and could face felony charges according to Macomb County Clerk Anthony Forlini.

St. Clair Shores Clerk Abby Barrett reported the instances of possible double voting in which four individuals cast more than one ballot, voting once by absentee and once in person, with the incidents occurring in precincts 7, 15 and 16.

Barrett reported the potential crimes to the Macomb County Clerk’s office and Michigan elections officials for further investigation, with the Macomb County Clerk’s Office informing the Michigan’s Secretary of State’s office and Macomb County Prosecutor Peter Lucido on Thursday in accordance with state law.

“Our elections in Macomb County have strong protocols in place designed to protect and ensure the accuracy and transparency of the votes of our community members. Multiple safeguards are put in place to ensure that instances of voter fraud are rare and if attempted, are exposed,” Forlini said in a statement.

“Our office has requested a thorough investigative process of each instance and if a crime was committed, we expect the lawbreakers to be held accountable to the furthest extent of the law.” Forlini said.

Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson issued her own statement Thursday night.

“I’m grateful to the Macomb County clerk for his partnership in ensuring that voter fraud is rare and that when it happens, we catch it and prosecute it to the fullest extent of the law. Thanks to our partnership and commitment to security, he followed the protocols we have in place, and I have now referred the matter to the Michigan Attorney General for further investigation and potential criminal charges,” Benson said.

Following the release of unofficial election results, election officials review all election processes and results to confirm their accuracy and correct any clerical mistakes. The process is overseen by bipartisan boards of canvassers, who also conduct any recounts and certify the results of the election.

Once the results are canvassed by the count, the Board of State Canvassers conducts its own review before voting to certify the election, when results are considered final.

Michigan Advance is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Michigan Advance maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Susan J. Demas for questions: info@michiganadvance.com. Follow Michigan Advance on Facebook and X.

'Character is too important': Paul Ryan slams Trump, MTG, Matt Gaetz and 'incoherent' GOP

Former House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) on Wednesday sat down with former Rep. Harold Ford Jr. (D-Tenn.) and talked about the impact of misinformation on foreign affairs and political polarization in Congress during the 2024 Mackinac Policy Conference at the Grand Hotel..

Ryan served as speaker of the House from 2015 through 2019, taking the gavel after former U.S. Rep. John Boehner (R-Ohio) stepped down from the position. Although he often worked with former President Donald Trump as speaker, Ryan said he won’t be voting for him in 2024, saying he’ll write in another Republican instead.

“Character is too important for me,” Ryan said at the Milken Institute Global Conference this month. “[The presidency] is a job that requires the kind of character [Trump] doesn’t have.”

During the panel, Ryan shared concerns about political misinformation on both sides of the aisle and the threats it poses to democracy.

“If you’re [House] speaker, or president, I think what you need to worry, right in front of you is, is the information your members are getting accurate information? Are they making decisions based on truth and reality or are they off in some rabbit hole?” Ryan said.

“Democracy itself is being tested in many ways. But two key tests of our democracy, I think, are related. One from within: the polarization of our country. The fact that it’s hard for us to come together as a country, to get consensus to solve our big problems,” Ryan said. “And related to that is the fact that we have illiberal, authoritarian, tyrannical regimes like China and Russia, that are trying to take advantage of that — our openness, our freedoms — to try and drive misinformation into our country, to proliferate this polarization to make it so that we can’t get consensus and solve our big problems.”

Ryan pointed to Russian success in promoting anti-Ukraine, pro-Russia content among the American right, and Pro-Hamas, anti-Israel sentiment on the left as examples of outside actors trying to agitate the country.

“There’s legitimate, you know, isolationism and pro-Palestinian stances but there’s agitators who are nation states that are trying to agitate our democracy and get us to tear each other apart by the seams and its a real challenge that a free society, especially the superpower free side of the world has to deal with,” Ryan said.

While lawmakers can attend intelligence briefings as a counter for misinformation about foreign policy, addressing misinformation about domestic policy is harder for congressional leadership Ryan said, noting that leaders need to act on it when they see it.

“I think the key thing as a leader is to make sure that you call it all out, that you do everything you can, to see this stuff developing, find out what the truth and the facts are, and then and then call it out. And you just have to design a tactic to do this, you have to have people working on making sure that when you see some weird conspiracy theory popping up in your ranks, that’s going to bleed into legislation, and form positions, you better get it in at its infancy,” Ryan said.

“If you let these things fester and go on, because you’re too afraid of taking people on, then you’re going to have a serious problem on your hands,” Ryan said.

This problem has cropped up on both sides of the aisle, Ryan said.

“There are people who go to Congress not to legislate, not to accomplish any policy, but to get famous. And in this day and age, you can get famous pretty easily,” Ryan said, before pointing to U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz’s (R-Fla.) ouster of former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s (R-Ga.) failed attempt to remove House Speaker Mike Johnson as examples.

“That’s entertainment that serves no policy purpose, no political purpose really other than to make somebody famous. And so that’s the kind of stuff that basically makes it really hard for democracy and self government to work. And so the challenge is, how can you make sure that we bring more policy people to Congress, as voters? Who do we promote, versus the entertainers,” Ryan said.

Ryan said Johnson was a dedicated conservative, defining conservatives as those dedicated to conserving the Constitution, liberty, freedom, self-determination and natural law. However, the Republican Party has been taken over by populism without ties to principle, Ryan said, calling it a “cult of personality” around former Trump.

Former U.S. Rep. Harold Ford Jr. and former Republican Speaker of the House Paul Ryan at the 2024 Mackinac Policy Conference.

However, Ryan said this moment is temporary, noting Trump’s age and the fact that he is only eligible to serve one term if reelected.

“Our party has been more or less taken over by a populism that is not tethered to it to a coherent set of principles and ideas and policies, which I think makes it sort of a temporary moment,” Ryan said.

He also criticized the Democratic Party, arguing it had attached itself to progressive ideology.

“That is just not where the majority of the country is. So I actually don’t think either of our two parties are really capturing what could be a big, working majority in this country that is there for the getting but isn’t going to be gotten right now,” Ryan said.

When asked to name the best thing President Joe Biden and Trump had done in their terms as president, Ryan listed Biden’s effort to build up NATO and confront Russia, and Trump’s tax policy. He also said Trump “gave some pretty good judges,” likely referring to conservative Supreme Court justices Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett.

Michigan Advance is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Michigan Advance maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Susan J. Demas for questions: info@michiganadvance.com. Follow Michigan Advance on Facebook and Twitter.

From Your Site Articles

Judge issues warrant for Michigan election denier in 2020 voting machine case

Oakland County Circuit Court Judge Jeffery S. Matis issued a bench warrant for Attorney Stefanie Lambert Junttila, granting a request from the prosecution after she repeatedly failed to provide fingerprints and a DNA sample as required by law.

Lambert Junttila did not appear at the Thursday show cause hearing and will have 24 hours to turn herself in, with prosecutor Tim Maat requesting that the warrant not be executed until 5 p.m. Friday in line with a previous agreement he had made with Lambert Junttila, where she asked that Maat not send officers to her home to arrest her.

“One of the conversations I had with her, with her counsel present, was, ‘If the grand jury decides to indict, can you promise me you won’t send the police to my house and have me arrested?’ I said yes. She says, ‘I got kids. I don’t want them to see that.’ I said, ‘No problem; just let us work with your lawyer,’” Maat said.

Lambert Junttila is one of three individuals indicted as part of a probe into alleged tampering with voting tabulators following the 2020 election where President Joe Biden defeated former President Donald Trump. Attorney and former Republican attorney general nominee Matthew DePerno and former state Rep. Daire Rendon (R-Lake City) were also indicted.

The court had issued multiple orders for Lambert Junttila to have her fingerprints and a DNA sample taken, as is required by law. Matis noted the initial order requesting fingerprints and DNA sampling was issued on Aug. 4, 2023, with a deadline of Aug. 10, 2023.

Matis also noted this order said a refusal to submit to fingerprinting may subject the defendant to contempt or criminal charges.

Matis also read multiple emails between Maat and Lambert Junttila’s defense counsel saying she would have her fingerprints taken.

“Of course, it hasn’t been done. So with that said, today’s hearing was scheduled. I did order the defendant to be present. Candidly, if she had shown up with proof she had done it that would have been fine. But obviously she’s not present,” Matis said.

While the case was initially scheduled for 3 p.m., Matis did not call the case until after 4 p.m. Thursday.

“What I want to emphasize here is I have no doubt that defense counsel has been honest with us, but I don’t think she’s been honest with them. And everything that’s been communicated to us I now question,” Maat said, listing a number of excuses from Lambert Junttila as to why her fingerprints had not been taken.

Maat, who traveled three hours to the court in Oakland County, also requested that Lambert Junttila cover the travel costs for himself and a state police trooper who appeared as a witness and waited for her to appear. Matis granted the request.

Lambert Junttila’s attorney, Michael J. Smith, argued she was confused as to whether the show cause hearing would be held, but Matis rejected that argument before agreeing to issue a bench warrant.

At the time of publication, Lambert is scheduled for trial on April 1.

Michigan Advance is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Michigan Advance maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Susan J. Demas for questions: info@michiganadvance.com. Follow Michigan Advance on Facebook and Twitter.

Here are 4 things to watch for in Michigan’s presidential primary

With polls open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m., Tuesday is the final day Michiganders can cast their vote in the presidential primary.

As state election workers prepare to tally selections for each party’s preferred presidential candidate, here are four key things to watch.

How uncommitted fares in the Democratic primary

As President Joe Biden continues to face a primary challenger in U.S. Rep. Dean Phillips (D-Minn.), Arab-American and progressive advocacy groups have called on voters to consider another option: uncommitted..

Three candidates are listed on the ballot in Michigan: Biden, Phillips and author Marianne Williamson, even though she suspended her presidential campaign on Feb. 7. Michigan voters also have the option to fill in uncommitted on their ballot, which signals a party vote, but that the voter is not committed to any of the candidates listed on the ballot.

The “Listen to Michigan” campaign is encouraging those opposed to Biden’s handling of the Israel-Hamas War to fill in uncommitted on their ballot to put pressure on the president to call for a ceasefire in Gaza and has set a goal of 10,000 votes, roughly mimicking the margin of votes by which Trump won Michigan in the 2016 election.

In 2020, 19,106 Democratic voters cast an uncommitted ballot, making up a total of 1.2% of the votes cast. In 2016, 21,601 people voted uncommitted on the Democratic ballot, making up 1.7% of the votes cast. During the 2012 Democratic primary, in which Barack Obama was the only candidate, uncommitted voters made up roughly 10% of the 194,887 votes cast.

“President Biden has been a successful candidate in the past by representing a broad coalition, but right now he’s not representing the vast majority of Democrats who want a ceasefire and an end to his funding of Israel’s war in Gaza,” the effort’s website reads.

U.S Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Detroit), former U.S. Sen. Nina Turner (D-Ohio) and former U.S. Reps. Andy Levin (D-Bloomfield Twp.) and Beto O’Rourke (D-Texas) have each shown support for the push, which has also been backed by the progressive advocacy group Our Revolution, which was spun out of U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders’ (I-Vt.) 2016 presidential campaign.

Sanders has endorsed Biden’s reelection.

A number of Michigan officials from across Southeast Michigan have also signed on in support of the movement including House Majority Floor Leader Abraham Aiyash (D-Hamtramck), Reps.Karen Whitsett (D-Detroit), Erin Byrnes (D-Dearborn) and Alabas Farhat (D-Dearborn), and Dearborn Mayor Abdullah Hammoud, a former state representative.

Although Biden is expected to win on Tuesday, progressive and Arab-American leaders say that a strong showing from uncommitted would signal trouble for Biden winning Michigan in November — and reelection.

U.S. Senate candidate Nasser Beydoun speaks at a rally calling for Michigan voters unhappy with President Joe Biden’s handling of the conflict in Gaza to vote “uncommitted” in the state’s Democratic presidential primary on Feb. 27. (Andrew Roth/Michigan Advance)

While senior aides for the president met with local leaders from Arab-American and Muslim communities in Southeast Michigan, the president has not visited the state since Feb. 1, where he met with members of the United Auto Workers after receiving the union’s endorsement.

Last week, Vice President Kamala Harris visited Grand Rapids as part of a nationwide tour on reproductive rights.

According to The White House press office, Biden is scheduled to meet with congressional leaders on Tuesday to discuss passing additional aid to Israel and Ukraine, as well as averting a government shutdown.

How successful Biden surrogates are at getting out the vote

While Biden is not scheduled to visit the state on the date of the primary, lawmakers and state leaders have been working to drum up support for the incumbent president.

On Sunday, U.S. Rep. Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio), Illinois Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton, and Michigan Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist visited three churches in and around Detroit and compared the Biden-Harris administration’s accomplishments for Black Michiganders to those of former President Donald Trump.

U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Lansing) and U.S. Rep. Haley Stevens (D-Birmingham) traversed Oakland County on Sunday highlighting the stakes the 2024 election holds for abortion rights, the president’s support for unions, and the Biden-Harris Administration’s efforts to improve infrastructure.

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer also hosted two phone bank events on Monday in Kentwood and Kalamazoo alongside State Sen. Sean McCann (D-Kalamazoo), Kalamazoo Democratic Party Chair Justin Mendoza and members of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union and the Michigan Education Association.

Whitmer serves as a national co-chair of Biden’s campaign and also provides support through her Fight Like Hell PAC, named after Whitmer’s campaign slogan in support of protecting reproductive rights.

Can Haley gain ground on Trump?

While neither Trump nor former United Nations Ambassador and South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley have announced plans to campaign in Michigan during Election Day, Haley spent the days leading up to the election campaigning within the state.

After failing to secure her home state of South Carolina and losing support from a major campaign backer, the Koch-funded Americans for Prosperity, Haley has worked to drum up support in Michigan, stopping in Troy on Sunday and Grand Rapids on Monday.

Haley lagged the former president in a recent Michigan poll from Emerson College polling and The Hill, with 69% of Republican voters saying they planned to vote for Trump, while 20% said they would vote for Haley.

While Trump said little about Haley during his Feb. 17 rally in Waterford Twp. — focusing instead on his legal troubles, and concerns about global trade, manufacturing and migrants at the southern border — Haley highlighted the division the former president has created within the Republican Party across the nation during her stop in Grand Rapids.

“The biggest takeaway I think coming in after South Carolina is you look at all the early states and Donald Trump, as technically the Republican incumbent, did not win 40% of the vote,” Haley told reporters.

“You can’t win a general election if you don’t acknowledge the 40% of Republicans who are saying we don’t want Donald Trump,” Haley said.

How Michiganders are voting is changing

With Michigan’s new election laws mandating nine days of early voting leading up to the election, more than 1 million Michigan voters had already cast their ballots as of Monday morning, showing a 13% higher pre-Election Day turnout than in the 2020 presidential primary.

More than 78,000 of those voters took advantage of in-person early voting. This is the first statewide election that the option was available.

“It’s inspiring to see Michigan citizens active and engaged in this Presidential Primary. Michigan voters have turned out in record numbers to cast an absentee ballot or to vote at an early voting site for the first time in our state’s history, and many thousands more will vote at the polls tomorrow,” Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson said in a statement. “No matter how Michiganders choose to cast their vote in this election, our dedicated local clerks and poll workers will administer a secure process and deliver accurate results.”

While more than 1.4 million Michiganders have requested an absentee ballot for the primary, 934,478 have submitted their ballot to be tabulated.

The Secretary of State’s Office encouraged voters who had not yet returned their ballot to hand deliver it to an official ballot drop box, rather than mailing it. All ballots must be received at clerk’s offices or drop boxes by 8 p.m. on Election Day or they will not be counted.

Advance contributor Andrew Roth provided reporting.

Michigan Advance is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Michigan Advance maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Susan J. Demas for questions: info@michiganadvance.com. Follow Michigan Advance on Facebook and Twitter.

Trump caters to global manufacturing fears during Michigan visit

Former President Donald Trump railed against his many legal charges while continuing to stoke fear about migrant workers, China and the southern border during a visit to Michigan, 10 days before the state’s Feb. 27 presidential primary.

Hundreds of people packed into a hangar in Waterford Township in Oakland County on Saturday as the former president took shots at President Joe Biden, spoke out against clean energy, electric vehicles, and continued to tout false claims that the 2020 election had been stolen, which have been repeatedly disproven.

Trump is facing a bevy of charges including felony charges for working to overturn the results of the 2020 election and mishandling top secret documents, as well as anti-racketeering charges in Georgia and charges in New York tied to hush money payments made during his 2016 presidential campaign. Last week, he also was ordered to pay $355 million plus interest in a New York civil fraud case for lying about his wealth.

Trump’s calendar becoming crowded as legal battles escalate in New York, D.C.

In the beginning of his speech Trump contested the charges against him, blasting the judge and the attorney general in the New York civil fraud case, special counsel Jack Smith, and E. Jean Carrol, whom Trump was found liable for sexually assaulting and defaming.

Carroll was awarded $5 million in May 2023 when a jury found Trump liable for sexual abuse and defamation. She was awarded an additional $83.3 million in January for another defamation case.

“We haven’t done anything wrong. How about the [case] two weeks ago? A woman, I’m saying who the hell is she, who is the woman? It’s so unfair,” Trump said.

Although Trump argued the legal system was being weaponized against him, he offered no evidence to support this claim.

“Every time the radical left Democrats, Marxists, communists and fascists indict me, I consider it a great badge of honor, I am being indicted for you,” Trump said.

“They want to silence me because I will never let them silence you,” he said.

Ahead of Trump’s appearance, U.S. Reps. Jack Bergman (R-Watersmeet) and Lisa McClain (R-Bruce Twp.) shared their support for the former president, saying Trump would address concerns of inflation and border security, topics that he centered in his own speech.

“We have a new category of crime in our country. It’s called migrant crime, and it’s taking over America,” Trump said.

While the former president voiced concerns of rising crime in New York he said were committed by gangs of migrants, total crime in the city dropped by .3% in 2023, with 400 fewer shootings, and a 12% drop in homicides. However, the police reported concerns with increased felony assaults and car thefts.

Trump also stoked concerns of global trade, particularly around auto manufacturing jobs.

“A vote for Biden is a vote to send tens of thousands of Michigan jobs to China and other places that we don’t want them to go. A vote for Trump is a vote to keep those manufacturing jobs in America and add a lot of jobs,” Trump said.

Trump makes surprise appearance at Sneaker Con in Philadelphia

Before his speech, Trump said he met with auto workers backstage. He argued these workers had been sold out by United Auto Workers (UAW) President Shawn Fain and that a pivot to electric vehicle manufacturing would result in a loss of jobs to China.

He also said that migrants posed the largest threat to unions, saying that undocumented workers would perform the same jobs for a lower price.

While Trump promised to bring auto jobs back to America, a 2020 report from the Detroit Free Press found the former president failed to deliver on these promises for Michigan during his time in office.

LaShawn English, UAW Region 1 Director told reporters during a Friday press call that the former president had repeatedly failed to show support for autoworkers, including during the 2019 GM strike, and in 2023 when Trump paid to speak at a non-union parts manufacturing and supply facility.

“In the labor movement, we say, ‘Which side are you on?’ We know what side he’s on, and it’s not our side,” English said.

The UAW endorsed Biden for president at its biennial political conference in Washington, D.C., with Fain calling Trump a “scab.”

Although Trump said the tariffs he imposed on China while in office protected autoworkers, U.S. companies got many of their parts from other countries, though the tariffs led to a 3% increase in gross domestic output for auto parts, according to a report from Politifact.

China also raised its own tariffs in response, leading to a reduction of U.S. auto exports to China. However, Trump’s campaign told Politifact that without these tariffs the U.S. might have seen a soaring number of imports of Chinese vehicles, as seen in the European Union.

During his speech Trump shared plans for additional tariffs.

“I’ll also pass the Trump Reciprocal Trade act. You know what that is? When a country charges us a tax, we say, ‘Oh, what is it 100%? Good, we’re charging them the same tax,’” he said.

“It’s basically saying you screw us and we screw you,” Trump said.

Before Trump’s arrival in Michigan on Saturday, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer issued a statement on X blasting Trump for his administration’s impact on the state.

“When Donald Trump comes to Michigan he’ll see a state that is better off because President [Joe] Biden has our backs. While Donald Trump has stood squarely against workers we restored their rights and cut taxes for hardworking Michiganders by $1 billion. While Donald Trump worked to take away the constitutional right to an abortion, we protected reproductive rights here at home. And now he’s doubling down on banning abortion nationwide,” the Democrat said.

“While Donald Trump shipped jobs overseas, we brought the supply chain home, with President Biden serving as a champion for Michigan’s world-class autoworkers. Donald Trump creates division everywhere he goes, but we’ve come together to make our state more welcoming and more preposterous. Michigan didn’t buy what Donald Trump was selling in 2020 and we won’t in 2024.”

Michigan Advance is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Michigan Advance maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Susan J. Demas for questions: info@michiganadvance.com. Follow Michigan Advance on Facebook and Twitter.

Pennsylvania Capital-Star is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Pennsylvania Capital-Star maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Kim Lyons for questions: info@penncapital-star.com. Follow Pennsylvania Capital-Star on Facebook and Twitter.

UAW head says union has ‘cards left to play’ as Detroit Three negotiations continue

As the United Auto Workers (UAW) strike against the Detroit Three automakers stretches into its fifth week, President Shawn Fain said Friday afternoon that the union “has cards left to play” in negotiations.

“In the past 24 hours, we’ve gotten new offers from two of the three companies. So despite all the bluster about how much the companies have stretched, there’s clearly still room to move,” Fain said.

Fain offered updates on contract negotiations with Ford, General Motors and Stellantis, alongside support for workers at Mack Truck, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, members of the Detroit Casino Council and a number of other workers in the midst of strikes or contract negotiations during a livestream on Friday.

He did not call on any new plants to join the strike.

Fain also praised the “incredible courage and fortitude” of striking workers who had been on the picket line since the strike began on Sept. 15, saying victory for the union would come through solidarity.

“Let me tell you what the companies’ path to victory is: fear, uncertainty, doubt and division,” Fain said.

“Every time these company executives open their mouth, it is to increase the fear, increase the uncertainty, and increase the doubt among the membership. They win when we lose our sense of purpose, when we lose our sense of unity,” Fain said.

Fain also addressed concerns from members.

“I’ve heard some members asking: When will we vote on this? Some members think maybe we’ve gotten as far as we can get and it’s time to settle. I want to be clear. The membership is the highest authority in our union. You will always have the final say,” Fain said.

“When we vote on a tentative agreement it will be because your leadership and your council thinks we’ve gotten absolutely every dollar we can,” Fain said.

As negotiations have continued, the Detroit Three have touted “record offers” to the union. While Fain agreed these were already record contracts, he said they’ve come at the end of decades of record decline for members.

“When auto workers have gone backwards over the last two decades. That’s a very low bar,” Fain said.

Fain also said it was a “pathetic irony” that each company’s record offer was followed by another days later.

Although Fain reported serious movement in contract negotiations with GM and Stellantis, the UAW is continuing to tussle with Ford.

The union announced it was expanding its stand up strike to include Ford’s Kentucky Truck Plant on Oct. 11, prompting a walkout of about 8,700 workers at the company’s most profitable plant.

Fain criticized comments from Ford Executive Chairman Bill Ford from earlier this week, calling on the UAW and the company to work as a team to compete with foreign automakers.

“The days of the UAW and Ford being a team to fight other companies are over. We won’t be used in this phony competition. We will always and forever be on the side of working people everywhere. Non-union auto workers are not the enemy. Those are our future union family,” Fain said.

“We’re not going to partner with Ford in a race to the bottom. And we’re not going to partner with the big three to match the low standards of the non-union automakers,” he said.

Companies offer 23% wage hike

While sharing updates on contract negotiations from the automakers, Fain highlighted progress alongside sticking points in each of the companies’ offers.

Before the Friday livestream, GM released a statement on its latest offer, saying it had made substantial movement toward a final agreement with the UAW.

“It is time for us to finish this process, get our team members back to work and get on with the business of making GM the company that will win and provide great jobs in the U.S. for our people for decades to come,” the statement read.

All three of the Detroit automakers have offered 23% wage increases and have agreed to eliminate wage tiers, Fain said.

Although the union has negotiated Ford’s wage progression down from an eight years to fully implement to a three-year progression, Stellantis has remained at a four-year progression. GM wants a two-tier progression, with three years for current employees and four years for future hires.

“Obviously, that’s not gonna fly. If Ford can do it so can GM and Stellantis, and we are not adding a new tier,” Fain said.

While the UAW has negotiated cost-of-living adjustments at Ford back to their formula from 2009, and is getting close at GM, Stellantis’s offer remains deficient, Fain said.

The union also negotiated profit sharing for temporary workers at Ford and GM, but not Stellantis. Negotiations have also led to offers of higher temporary workers wages at Ford and GM. Ford is also offering to convert all current temporary workers who have worked at least 90 hours to full-time employees, while GM is offering to convert all temporary employees one year of employment to full-time workers.

Meanwhile, Stellantis is offering temporary worker wages of $20 an hour, Fain said.

“At all three [companies], we’re still negotiating a pathway for future temps to get converted to end the abuse of these members. We’re fighting hard to win language across the Big Three that will make sure that temporary work is just that: temporary,” Fain said.

While the union has won the right to strike over plant closures from Ford and Stellantis, GM has not budged, Fain said.

The UAW is also still negotiating for additional holiday and paid parental leave, Fain said.

All three companies are now offering a $3 increase to their retirement pension multiplier and additional 401(k) contributions. However, Ford and Stellantis are offering a 9.5% employer contribution, while GM is offering 8%, Fain said.

Ford is also offering retirees a $250 annual lump sum payment, while GM has offered a one-time $1,000 payment. Stellantis has not offered anything on that front, Fain said.

UAW graphic

In a graphic breaking down each company’s retirement offer, the union called GM’s and Ford’s payment offers “deeply inadequate.”

While GM and Stellantis have gotten the message and caught up to Ford in negotiations, GM remains worrying, Fain said.

“They tell us they need a two-tier wage progression because they expect to do a lot of hiring. At the same time, they threaten product and won’t give us the right to strike over plant closures. I wonder how members at Arlington and Flint Truck feel about that,” Fain said.

Stellantis has its issues, as well, Fain said.

“They’re still at a four-year progression. They’re still at just $20 for temp workers. They’ve rejected all increases to retiree pay. I know plenty of members at Sterling Heights Assembly Plant, and in Kokomo who aren’t going to like that,” Fain said.

Fain also said he wondered what workers at Ford’s River Rouge Complex thought of Bill Ford’s speech earlier this week.

According to a report from NBC, Ford, who was speaking at the Rouge Complex, said future investments and “factories like the one we are in today” would be lost if automakers cannot compete with foreign automakers.

Detroit is ‘epicenter of this fight,’ labor leader Shuler tells Motor City-area striking workers

“The bottom line is: We’ve got cards left to play, and they’ve got money left to spend. That’s the hardest part of a strike. Right before a deal is when there is the most aggressive push for that last mile,” Fain said.

“They want division. They want fear. They want uncertainty. And what we have is our solidarity,” Fain said.

Following Fain’s livestream, Stellantis released a statement on the state of negotiations.

“Negotiations between Stellantis and the UAW continue to be productive, building on the momentum from the past several weeks,” the statement read.

“We have made progress on narrowing the gaps on significant issues that will bring immediate financial gains and job security for our employees. Our focus remains on resolving those issues as soon as possible and finding solutions that protect the company and our employees,” it read.

Michigan Advance is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Michigan Advance maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Susan Demas for questions: info@michiganadvance.com. Follow Michigan Advance on Facebook and Twitter.

Sanctions stand for lawyers in frivolous 2020 election lawsuit

On Friday, the U.S. Supreme Court denied a request to review a 10th Circuit Court of Appeals’ decision that affirmed awarding sanctions against attorneys responsible for a frivolous lawsuit tied to the 2020 election.

The sanctions were awarded to various defendants, including the state of Michigan, Facebook, Dominion Voting Systems and the state of Pennsylvania were awarded as compensation for costs to respond to the frivolous suit, which falsely alleged the defendants had infringed on the right of American citizens’ right to vote for president.

The sanctions, which included $4,900 for the state of Michigan, were awarded by the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado. They were upheld by the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals.

“This ruling sends a resounding message: attorneys who neglected their oath to support the Constitution by taking part in election lawsuits based neither in fact nor reality not only undermined our legal system — they did irreparable harm to our election processes and will be held accountable,” Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel said in a statement.

In the order specifying the sanctions, U.S. Magistrate Judge N. Reid Neureiter wrote that the attorneys who filed the suit “are experienced lawyers who should have known better. They need to take responsibility for their misconduct.”

“I believe that rather than a legitimate use of the legal system to seek redress for redressable grievances, this lawsuit has been used to manipulate gullible members of the public and foment public unrest. To that extent, this lawsuit has been an abuse of the legal system and an interference with the machinery of government,” Neureiter wrote.

Michigan Advance is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Michigan Advance maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Susan Demas for questions: info@michiganadvance.com. Follow Michigan Advance on Facebook and Twitter.

Trump to speak Wednesday at non-union automotive parts manufacturer

Former President Donald Trump on Wednesday is set to deliver remarks at Drake Enterprises, an automotive parts manufacturer and supplier in Clinton Township in Macomb County, according to an announcement from Trump’s campaign.

The former president’s visit to the facility will follow President Joe Biden’s Tuesday visit to join striking United Auto Workers (UAW) union members on the picket line.

“It’s time for a win-win agreement that keeps American auto manufacturing thriving with well-paid UAW jobs,” Biden said in a social media post.

For the first time, the UAW on Sept. 15 declared a strike against all three U.S. automakers: Ford, General Motors and Stellantis. The union on Friday expanded the strike from three auto plants to include 38 GM and Stellantis auto suppliers across the country, excluding Ford suppliers due to progress in talks.

The striking locations are spread across 21 states. Michigan has the most plants on strike in the country with 14.

Trump, who announced his trip first, blasted Biden’s decision to visit the state on a post to his social media platform, claiming the president had no intention of visiting UAW members until Trump made his announcement.

The UAW has not endorsed a candidate in the 2024 presidential election, but UAW President Shawn Fain invited Biden to the picket line and has criticized Trump on multiple occasions.

“Every fiber of our union is being poured into fighting the billionaire class and an economy that enriches people like Donald Trump at the expense of workers,” Fain said ahead of Trump’s visit to Michigan.

“We can’t keep electing billionaires and millionaires that don’t have any understanding what it is like to live paycheck to paycheck and struggle to get by and expecting them to solve the problems of the working class.”

Trump’s remarks are scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. Wednesday. His appearance coincides with the second Republican presidential debate, which Trump is not attending.

According to the Michigan AFL-CIO, a state federation of more than 40 labor organizations to which the UAW belongs, Drake Enterprises is a non-union manufacturer. The company did not return requests for comment.

Charles Ballard, a Michigan State University professor emeritus of economics, said Michigan is viewed by both parties as a swing state, voting for Trump in 2016 and Biden in 2020.

While labor has long been a part of the Democratic Party’s voter base, the percentage of union workers in the American workforce has been steadily declining over the past 70 years, Ballard said. However, Republicans have previously courted votes from union workers, Ballard citing the “Reagan Democrats” in the 1980s, working-class Democrats who voted to elect Ronald Reagan president in 1980.

Ballard also noted that a substantial amount of blue collar workers voted for Trump, as both parties are now working to appeal to the working class.

With the national presidential campaign already underway, it’s common for primary candidates to appeal to their party base during the primary and appeal to the greater populace in the general election. Trump likely doesn’t believe he needs to make this pivot, Ballard said.

“I think he believes that he’s gotten the Republican nomination,” Ballard said.

“I think he’s going to try to continue to appeal to white working class voters, which includes a lot of people who are union members,” he said.

Whether that appeal is anything in line with the UAW remains to be seen, Ballard said.

While he doesn’t believe it’s in the former president’s interest to make an explicitly anti-labor appeal, that would be a strong step, Ballard said, with many Republicans preferring to side-step the issue.

“If Trump were to be really explicit and say, ‘I’m in a non-union plant. Non-union workers are good guys, union workers are bad guys,’ that would galvanize things in a different way,” Ballard said.

While both Biden and Trump are likely coming to Michigan due to its status as a swing state and the heart of the UAW, the policy takeaways from each appearance could be quite different.

“If I were Joe Biden, I would say, ‘Why is Donald Trump coming here? Is he trying to pretend that he’s a friend of workers?’” Ballard said.

Michigan has the most plants joining the UAW’s Detroit Three strike

“Arguably, the most important piece of legislation signed into law by Donald Trump was a tax cut bill passed in December of 2017 that showered the vast majority of its benefits on very high income individuals, especially if they have large portfolios of corporate stock. So that doesn’t sound to me like a pro-worker stance,” Ballard said.

While Trump’s previous campaigns appealed to white working class voters by appealing to anxieties about the country’s changing demographics, Ballard said he didn’t see Trump appealing to workers on platforms like striking or implementing policies for wage gains.

However, this doesn’t prevent Trump from saying he’s pro-worker, Ballard said, noting that the tax legislation passed in December 2017 was presented by Republican leaders as a policy that would raise wages.

“There was no evidence that that was true, but, you know, I guess it’s a free country. If you want to say tax breaks for billionaires are good for workers, you’re free to say that,” Ballard said.

Michigan Advance is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Michigan Advance maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Susan Demas for questions: info@michiganadvance.com. Follow Michigan Advance on Facebook and Twitter.

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