-
The group responsible for drawing Michigan’s new legislative district lines is facing an ethics question after one of its members took a new job.
-
On today’s Stateside podcast, we look at a couple of postmortem election stories. We get into the spiciness of election results and challenges and we also look at how redistricting has affected election outcomes.
-
The commission has requested that its $1.5 million in leftover funds from the previous year be carried over to pay for their legal needs.
-
Today on Stateside, we heard about how congressional and legislative redistricting affected Black voters in metro-Detroit. Then a DNR official gave an update on this season's deer hunt. We heard about the growing use of electric bikes. Plus, a reporter unpacked the controversy over wind turbines in mid-Michigan.
-
Michigan's redistricting commission voted Thursday to request a review by the state auditor general.
-
Michigan’s redistricting commission will have a new executive director to guide it through addressing a projected million-dollar budget shortfall.
-
A member of Michigan’s redistricting commission is suing the group.
-
The Michigan Secretary of State wants the state Supreme Court to speed up the timeline for a new political map if the state's redistricting commission loses a lawsuit.
-
One lawsuit pending against the state's redistricting commission is in federal court. The other is a state case.
-
A group of Republicans challenge the balance of the state’s newly redrawn political maps. GM invests $7 billion into Michigan plants as the state looks to incentivize production. A brief history of the unpopular "pension tax" in Michigan. A Right to Life director weighs in on Michigan's abortion laws.