| All Content | RSS | |
| View all podcasts & RSS feeds | ||
Podcasts & RSS Feeds
Connect with Us
Most Active Stories
- There's a tick boom in Michigan - Here are 5 things you should know
- Students aren’t leaving Michigan football - Michigan football is leaving them
- The 6 most dangerous neighborhoods in Michigan
- The 15 Michigan schools running the biggest deficits
- You need to see these photos of the pet coke piles in Detroit
Michigan Voices
Politics
6:45 pm
Wed March 7, 2012
Michigan Court of Appeals strikes down GOP reapportionment of Oakland County commission
LANSING, Mich. (AP) — The Michigan Court of Appeals has upheld part of a lower court's ruling involving redistricting in Oakland County.
The court ruled Wednesday that the law passed last year by the GOP-controlled Legislature was a local act affecting only one government and needed to pass with two-thirds majorities in the House and Senate to meet state constitutional requirements.
A bipartisan Oakland County apportionment committee had drawn a redistricting map for the county Board of Commissioners when the GOP-controlled board challenged the plan. After losing in court, GOP commissioners asked Republican lawmakers to empower them to draw their own plan.
Wednesday's ruling means the county must keep its current level of commissioners and the bipartisan apportionment plan until after the 2020 census. It's unclear if Republicans will appeal to a higher court.
-
Politics
