Breaking Down the Michigan Ballot Proposals

If you do not have time to do your homework on these, I have laid my opinion of what I believe, as a Michigan Taxpayer, businesswoman, parent and conservative.

Prop 1 Yes— Emergency Managers are needed in Michigan after officials ruined the fiscal soundness of major cities.
Prop 2 No— Taxpayers should not be forced to subsidize public union greed, which represent the basis of why emergency managers have been utilized.
Prop 3 No— Ridiculous and insulting proposal by green corporations, trying to create an energy crisis.
Prop 4 No— Absolutely outrageous RINO and Liberal policy to force unionization upon those who care for their handicapped family members.
Prop 5 Yes— Raising taxes in our state should take a 2/3 majority in both the House and Senate. Enough said.
Prop 6 Yes— Absolutely. We must stop our RINO Governor from ignoring the checks to his power. Put the bridge to a vote.

The are about fiscal sanity in Michigan, forcing the 3% of those working for unions to not be able to bankrupt municipalities, stopping greedy green corporations from creating a Michigan Energy Crisis, stopping stealth unionization, making it tougher to raise our taxes, as well as checking the power of our rogue Governor. Every one of them is important, and it is important that we vote on every one.

Proposals 1, 2 and 4 are directly related because of the greed of unions and the power they wield. I am not against unions, I am against public unions from bankrupting cities forcing us to decide if they need emergency managers. It is my opinion that Governor Snyder could have been courageous like Governor Walker was with this issue, but since he wasn’t, it is to put to a vote. Should it be be inserted IN OUR CONSTITUTION that unions in Michigan continue to pilfer from the taxpayers? Not only are Proposals 2 and 4 offensive to those 97% of people in Michigan who do not belong to unions, the language in Proposal 2 prohibits Michigan from becoming a Right To Work State.

Proposal 3 basically is a condescending snub to your intelligence. It forces your utility company to offer 25% of electricity in renewables. Not only will they have to buy more electricity out of state, green initiatives cost a lot of money for little progress. Prop 3 isn’t just a no, it’s a Hell No.

Proposal 5 is self-explanatory. Do you want it to be easier or harder for Lansing to raise your taxes? Harder right? Vote Yes.

A Yes vote on Proposal 6 checks the power of the Governor by We The People. He has acted as a tyrant in regards to the International Bridge project, and must be slapped down in this vote.

I recently attended a presentation by Michael LaFaive of the , sponsored by the Cheboygan Tea Party. An excellent explanation of sound fiscal policy and warnings of the encroachment upon our civil liberties and loss of personal freedoms was given, and I’d like to thank the Mack Center, Michael LaFaive, and Stephenie from the Cheboygan Tea Party.

The following is a little blurb I asked Stephenie to put together to describe her great group. The presentation I attended was attended by 87 people, and the Mack Center is going all over the state giving these presentations.

Our tea party is nonpartisan. We do not endorse candidates, rather we focus on our three core values of constitutionally limited government, fiscal responsibility, and free markets. We try to follow the votes of our elected officials in these 3 areas and hold them accountable for their actions. We are focused on educating ourselves about our founding principles and our constitution. We also try through our functions, letters to the editor, and interactions with elected officials to defend principles of liberty wherever possible. I think that many people have forgotten what made America the greatest nation ever. It is up to us to remind them and show them all a free people can accomplish for themselves. We are growing and adding new members all the time. We are not going away. It’s probably enough to make Nancy Pelosi (or John Boehner) cry. 😉

Ha! Thank God for the Tea Party people.

Please follow and like:

Will Republicans in Michigan Listen to the Grassroots?

Since the teaparty so effectively installed Republicans in legislative offices in Lansing last November, the time has now come to find out if those legislators will take a first bold step to increase freedom in the State.

The Michigan Freedom To Work movement has spread across the state, with many proponents rallying and asking individual county Republican Parties to adopt resolutions in support of the movement.  My local county party has, and , indicating a grassroots push for freedom to work.  Many proponents felt it has been an uphill battle, even though the freedom to work without belonging to a union seems like a no-brainer for those in the Republican Party.  Michigan Governor, Rick Snyder has said numerous times that it was not part of his agenda, but will sign such legislation if it reaches his desk.

That posturing has made some movement conservatives very leery of the Governor’s commitment to Republicanism, many labeling him a RINO.  Democrats have suggested that if the Freedom To Work legislation pending is pushed through and signed, that they will not work with the Governor on his big, signature, big government push for a second International Bridge.  That’s not bad news for conservatism, it is however, bad news for the Gov.

Despite massive conservative outcry, the federally and Canadian funded Detroit River International Crossing bridge (DRIC), now renamed the New International Trade Crossing (NITC), remains a signature, epic battle for the Governor.  Continually reiterating the the DRIC will not cost a dime to taxpayers, while at the same time, securing their money to build it, has puzzled many grassroots Republicans.   There is already a bridge in use, owned by a private businessman, and the DRIC battle was began by the ultra-leftist, Canadian-born, former Governor of Michigan, Jennifer Granholm.  Snyder has the help of his Senate Majority Leader, who has been arguing in favor of the bridge, as if it will increase jobs in Michigan, as a much-needed infrastructure improvement that will produce 10,ooo jobs, if you add in the additional funding from the feds for road construction.  That amount of jobs would be bought by the government, much like they have bought about 10,000 green jobs in Michigan.

The simple argument here is one of philosophy.  Do we, as Republicans believe that government should displace private sector business?  Ask any Republican, minus the liberals in Lansing, the Governor, and the Senate Majority leader, and the answer would be a resounding Hell No.

So the Republican Governor of the now Republican state of Michigan, with a majority in the Michigan House of Representatives, and a super-majority in the Michigan Senate, should not have a fight on their hands.  If the Governor  listened to the Republican grassroots, the DRIC fight should be lost and Freedom to Work should be passed and signed by him.

But will he listen?

Please follow and like: