Citizens Protecting Michigan's Constitution v. Secretary of State , 324 Mich. App. 561 ( 2018 )


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  •                             STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    CITIZENS PROTECTING MICHIGAN’S                                    FOR PUBLICATION
    CONSTITUTION, JOSEPH SPYKE, and                                   June 7, 2018
    JEANNE DAUNT,                                                     9:15 a.m.
    Plaintiffs,
    v                                                                 No. 343517
    SECRETARY OF STATE and MICHIGAN
    BOARD OF STATE CANVASSERS,
    Defendants/Cross-Defendants,
    and
    VOTERS NOT POLITICIANS BALLOT
    COMMITTEE, doing business as VOTERS NOT
    POLITICIANS; COUNT MI VOTE, doing
    business as VOTERS NOT POLITICIANS;
    KATHRYN A. FAHEY; WILLIAM R. BOBIER;
    and DAVIA C. DOWNEY;
    Intervening Defendants/Cross-
    Plaintiffs.
    Before: CAVANAGH, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and Fort HOOD, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    Plaintiffs Citizens Protecting Michigan’s Constitution (CPMC), Joseph Spyke, and
    Jeanne Daunt seek a writ of mandamus that orders defendants Secretary of State (Secretary) and
    the Board of State Canvassers (the Board) to reject an initiative petition filed by Voters Not
    Politicians concerning the forming of an independent citizen commission regarding redistricting
    and to not place it on the 2018 general election ballot. Intervening defendants Voters Not
    Politicians Ballot Committee and Count MI Vote, both doing business as Voters Not Politicians
    (VNP), Kathryn A. Fahey, William R. Bobier, and Davia C. Downey filed a cross-complaint,
    asking this Court to direct defendants to immediately execute their clear legal duties regarding
    the initiative petition. We deny the relief sought in the complaint for a writ of mandamus and
    grant the cross-complaint.
    -1-
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    A. THE PARTIES
    Plaintiff CPMC is a ballot question committee. Plaintiff Spyke is a qualified elector
    registered to vote in Ingham County and is a former paid employee of a political candidate.
    Plaintiff Daunt, a qualified elector registered to vote in Genesee County, is the parent of a person
    otherwise disqualified from serving on the proposed commission.
    Defendant Secretary is the chief election officer of the state and has supervisory authority
    over local election officials. MCL 168.21. See also Const 1963, art 5, § 3. Defendant Board is a
    constitutionally created board; Const 1963, art 2, § 7. Its duties are established by law; MCL
    168.22(2) and MCL 168.841. It canvasses initiative petitions to determine if the requisite
    number of qualified and registered electors has signed the petition. It makes the final decision
    regarding the sufficiency of the petition. MCL 168.476.
    Intervening defendant VNP is a ballot question committee. Intervening defendant Fahey,
    a qualified elector registered to vote within Kent County, is the founder of VNP and serves as
    treasurer. Intervening defendant Bobier, who signed the VNP petition, is a qualified elector
    registered to vote within Oceana County and a former elected member of the Michigan House of
    Representatives. Intervening defendant Downey, who signed the VNP petition, is a qualified
    elector registered to vote within Ingham County.
    B. THE INITIATIVE PETITION
    On June 28, 2017, intervening defendant VNP Ballot Committee filed an initiative
    petition for the ballot proposal with the Secretary as required by MCL 168.471.1 After staff at
    the Bureau of Elections initially refused to recommend that the petition be approved, VNP
    redrafted the proposal to further address issues of abrogation and alteration. The Board approved
    the form of the petition on August 17, 2017, noting that its approval did not extend to the
    substance of the proposal, the substance of the summary of the proposal, the manner in which the
    proposal language is affixed to the petition, or whether the petition properly characterizes those
    provisions of the Constitution that have been altered or abrogated.
    On December 18, 2017, VNP submitted the initiative petition supported by over 425,000
    signatures2 of registered voters for an amendment to the constitution to be placed on the
    November 2018 general election ballot. Primarily the VNP Proposal would amend Article 4, § 6
    of Michigan’s 1963 Constitution regarding the commission on legislative redistricting by
    changing the composition of the commission and its administration.3 A new independent citizen
    1
    That statute provides, in pertinent part: “Petitions under section 2 of article XII of the state
    constitution of 1963 proposing an amendment to the constitution shall be filed with the secretary
    of state at least 120 days before the election at which the proposed amendment is to be voted
    upon.”
    2
    According to the Secretary and the Board, only 315,654 signatures were needed.
    3
    On the initiative petition, the proposal is summarized as follows, in pertinent part: “A proposal
    to amend the Michigan Constitution to create an Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission.
    -2-
    commission would have exclusive authority to develop and establish redistricting plans for the
    senate, house and congressional districts.
    To prevent the VNP Proposal from appearing on the ballot, and before the Board could
    certify the petition as sufficient or insufficient, counsel for CPMC sent a letter to the Secretary,
    urging her to reject the VNP Proposal on the ground that it should not be submitted to voters
    because it was massive and would enact sweeping changes to the constitution. CPMC contended
    that it was a general revision to the constitution and thus could not be accomplished by ballot
    initiative. Further, the VNP Proposal purportedly omitted multiple sections of the constitution
    that would be abrogated by the proposal. CPMC asserted that the Secretary had a clear legal
    duty to reject the petition.
    Counsel for VNP then sent a letter to the Board, requesting that it certify the VNP
    Proposal for the November 2018 general election ballot. VNP observed that no challenges to the
    428,587 signatures had been filed by the deadline. Further, two separate entities had analyzed
    the sampled signatures and determined that 466 out of 505 sample signatures were valid, thereby
    confirming that a sufficient number of signatures support the proposal. VNP indicated that the
    instant suit by CPMC was irrelevant to the Board’s clear legal duty to certify the VNP Proposal.
    On May 22, 2018, the Bureau of Elections released its staff report pursuant to
    MCL 168.476(3). In it, the Bureau staff recommended that the Board certify the petition.
    After plaintiffs filed the instant complaint for mandamus, intervening defendants moved
    to intervene. This Court granted the motion to intervene and accepted the cross-complaint filed
    by intervening defendants. Citizens Protecting Michigan’s Constitution v Secretary of State,
    unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered May 11, 2018 (Docket No. 343517).
    The Board notes that it must complete its canvass of VNP’s petition at least two months
    before the November 2018 general election. Const 1963, art 12, § 2; MCL 168.476(2); MCL
    168.477(1). Also, the Director of Elections also must prepare a statement of not more than 100
    words for placement on the ballot. MCL 168.32(2).
    C. BACKGROUND
    VNP asserts that its proposal is “a desired means to remedy the widely-perceived abuses
    associated with partisan ‘gerrymandering’[4] of state legislative and congressional election
    If adopted, this amendment would transfer the authority to draw Congressional and State
    Legislative district lines from the Legislature and the Governor to the Independent Commission.
    The selection process will be administered by the Secretary of State. Thirteen commissioners
    will be randomly selected from a pool of registered voters, and consist of four members who
    self-identity with each of the two major political parties, and five non-affiliated, independent
    members. Current and former partisan elected officials, lobbyists, party officers and their
    employees are not eligible to serve. . . .”
    4
    The term “gerrymander” is a portmanteau of the name of Elbridge Gerry, a signer of the
    Declaration of Independence, fifth Vice President of the United States, and the eighth Governor
    -3-
    districts by the establishment of new constitutionally-mandated procedures designed to ensure
    that the redistricting process can no longer be dominated by one political party.” More than a
    century ago, Justice Morse of our Supreme Court warned of the “greatest danger to our free
    institutions” where a political party retains its political power by dividing election districts in a
    manner to give special advantages to one group:
    By this system of gerrymandering, if permitted, a political party may control for
    years the government, against the wishes, protests, and votes of a majority of the
    people of the State, each Legislature, chosen by such means, perpetuating its
    political power by like legislation from one apportionment to another. [Giddings
    v Secretary of State, 
    93 Mich. 1
    , 13; 
    52 N.W. 944
    (1892), MORSE, C.J.,
    concurring.]5
    Ninety years later, our Supreme Court commented that, “[i]n many states, the most egregious
    gerrymandering is practiced by the Legislature with the aid of computers to achieve results
    which will pass must under federal standards yet favor the partisan interests of the dominant
    political faction.” In re Apportionment of State Legislature—1982, 
    413 Mich. 96
    , 137; 321
    NW2d 565 (1982). In short, “[i]t is axiomatic that apportionment is of overwhelming
    importance to the political parties.” In re Apportionment of State Legislature—1992, 
    439 Mich. 715
    , 716; 486 NW2d 639 (1992). Or, as Senator John Cornyn of Texas once said, “You can’t
    take the politics out of politics, and there is nothing more political than redistricting.”6
    We are not alone in analyzing redistricting issues. Challenges to alleged unconstitutional
    partisan gerrymandering are pending before the United States Supreme Court in two cases.7
    Further, suit has been brought in the United States District Court, Eastern District of Michigan,
    to contest Michigan’s existing apportionment plan.8
    In the United States, a minority of states employ a nonpartisan independent mechanism
    for the drawing of legislative districts.9 In most of the remaining states, including Michigan,
    whichever party is in control of the state Legislature draws the districts.10
    of Massachusetts, known for designing legislative districts in strange shapes, one of which
    resembled a salamander. Arizona State Legislature v Arizona Independent Redistricting Comm,
    __ US ___; 
    135 S. Ct. 2652
    , 2658 n 1; 
    192 L. Ed. 2d 704
    (2015).
    5
    Justice McGrath concurred with his brethren justices and added with regard to gerrymandering
    that “[t]he greatest danger to the Republic is not from ignorance, but from machinations to defeat
    the expression of the popular will.” 
    Id. at 13-14
    (MCGRATH, J., concurring).
    6
    Aarab and Regnier, Mapping the Treasure State: What States Can Learn from Redistricting in
    Montana, Montana Law Review, 
    76 Mont. L
    Rev 257 (2015) (citation omitted).
     (accessed May 25, 2018).
    
    7 Gill v
    Whitford, No. 16-1161 (Wisconsin), and Benisek v Lamone, No. 17-333 (Maryland).
    8
    League of Women Voters of Michigan v Secretary of State, No. 17-14148 (WestLaw 6610622).
    9
    See All About Redistricting, Prof. Justin Levitt, Loyola Law School,
     (accessed May 24, 2018) and National Conference of State
    -4-
    D. THE 1963 CONSTITUTION—REDISTRICTING
    Under the 1963 Michigan constitution, the 38 members of Michigan’s senate and the 110
    members of the house of representatives are elected according to the district in which they reside.
    The constitution sets forth the apportionment factors and rules for individual districts, which are
    redrawn after the publication of the total population within the federal decennial census. Const
    1963, art 4.
    The apportionment of districts for representatives and senators is not a recent
    phenomenon, as the Michigan Constitution of 1835 addressed apportionment11 and set forth
    parameters for representative districting12 and for senate districts.13 Fifteen years later, Article 4
    was revised to provide for the division of a county into representative districts, when necessary,
    by board of supervisors.14 The 1908 Constitution continued the division of counties into districts
    by a board of supervisors.15 In the general election in 1952, the voters passed Proposition 3,
    which amended Articles 2-4 of § 5 of the 1908 Constitution to establish senate districts with
    geographic boundaries that were not subject to alteration based on a population change.16 After
    Legislatures, Redistricting Law 2010, pp 161-162,  (accessed May 25, 2018).
    10
    See previous footnote, All About Redistricting.
    11
    Const 1835, art 4, § 4 provided, in pertinent part, that the Legislature “shall apportion anew the
    representatives and senators among the several counties and districts, according to the number of
    white inhabitants.”
    12
    Const 1835, art 4, § 4 provided in part that representatives were to be chosen “by the electors
    of the several counties or districts into which the State shall be divided for that purpose.” That
    section added that there would be one representative for each organized county, “but no county
    hereafter organized shall be entitled to a separate representative until it shall have attained a
    population equal to the ratio of representation hereafter established.”
    13
    Const 1835, art 4, § 6 provided: “The State shall be divided, at each new apportionment, into
    a number of not less than four nor more than eight senatorial districts, to be always composed on
    contiguous territory; so that each district shall elect an equal number of senators annually, as
    nearly as may be: and no county shall be divided in the formation of such districts.”
    14
    Const 1850, art 4, § 3 provided that representative districts should have “as nearly as may be
    an equal number of inhabitants,” and further provided, in pertinent part: “In every county
    entitled to more than one representative, the board of supervisors shall assemble at such time and
    place as the legislature shall prescribe, and divide the same into representative districts, equal to
    the number of representatives to which such county is entitled by law . . . .”
    15
    Const 1908, art 4, § 3 provided in pertinent part that “[i]n every county entitled to more than
    one representative, the board of supervisors shall assemble at such time and place as shall be
    prescribed by law, divide the same into representative districts equal to the number of
    representatives to which such county is entitled by law . . . .”
    16
    In 1960, an elector brought a mandamus action to prevent the Secretary of State from
    performing acts related to the senate districting, alleging that the 1952 amendments were
    violative of equal protection. Our Supreme Court dismissed the action and the United States
    Supreme Court remanded. See Scholle v Secretary of State, 
    360 Mich. 1
    ; 104 NW2d 63 (1960),
    vacated and remanded sub nom, Scholle v Hare, 
    369 U.S. 429
    (1962). On remand, our Supreme
    -5-
    the 1961 Constitutional Convention, the 1963 Constitution called for districts to be apportioned
    under a weighted formula based on land area and population.
    Under the current constitution, senate districts are aligned with Michigan’s counties, each
    of which is assigned an apportionment factor of the state’s population, based on the census,
    multiplied by four and the county’s percentage of the total land area. Const 1963, art 4, § 2. The
    constitution also sets forth particular rules for the dividing of the state into senatorial districts.
    Const 1963, art 4, § 2.
    House districts are defined by representative areas that “shall consist of compact and
    convenient territory contiguous by land.” Const 1963, art 4, § 3. The districts also are defined
    by county and based on population. Const 1963, art 4, § 3.
    After one representative is assigned to each representative area as defined above, the
    remaining house seats are apportioned on the basis of population. Const 1963, art 4, § 3.
    Counties that are entitled to two or more representatives are divided into single member districts,
    which are created based on population and which, if possible, should follow city and township
    boundaries and “be composed of compact and contiguous territory as nearly square in shape as
    possible.” Const 1963, art 4, § 3. Representative areas that contain more than one county, and
    are entitled to more than one representative, are divided into single member districts, which
    adhere to county lines and are as equal as possible in population.17 Const 1963, art 4, § 3.
    Thus, over half a century ago, the Constitution of 1963 established criteria and
    procedures to appoint a commission to decide the apportionment of legislative districts for the
    senate and house of representatives. Const 1963, art 4, § 6; In re Apportionment of Legislature—
    1972, 
    387 Mich. 442
    , 450; 197 NW2d 249 (1972) (“The people in adopting the 1963 State
    Constitution, provided the procedure to carry out legislative reapportionment.”). The
    constitution provided for an eight-member commission whose purpose was to “district and
    apportion the senate and house of representatives according to the provisions of this
    constitution.” Const 1963, art 4, § 6, ¶ 5. A new commission would be appointed whenever the
    constitution requires apportionment or districting. Const 1963, art 4, § 6, ¶ 3. Four members
    were selected by the state organizations of the Democratic and Republican parties.18 Const 1963,
    art 4, § 6, ¶ 1. The state political organizations also selected a resident from four specific
    regions, including the upper peninsula and three portions of the lower peninsula—the north, the
    southwest and the southeast. Const 1963, art 4, § 6, ¶ 1. With two exceptions, commission
    members could not be officers or employees of government and could not serve in the
    Legislature for two years after the apportionment in which they participated became effective.
    Court decided that the amendments concerning senate districts were invalid. Scholle v Secretary
    of State (On Remand ), 
    367 Mich. 176
    ; 116 NW2d 350 (1962).
    17
    The constitution also provides for procedures for territory that is annexed or merged with a
    city between apportionments. Const 1963, art 4, § 4. Islands also are taken into account. Const
    1963, art 4, § 5.
    18
    If a third political party offered a candidate for governor who received over 25% of the
    gubernatorial vote, the commission would increase to 12 members, with four chosen from the
    third political party’s state organization. Const 1963, art 4, § 6, ¶ 1.
    -6-
    Const 1963, art 4, § 6, ¶ 2. Members held office until the apportionment they worked on became
    operative. Const 1963, art 4, § 6.
    When a majority of the commission could not agree on redistricting, the members could
    submit a proposed plan to our Supreme Court. Const 1963, art 4, § 6, ¶ 7. The Supreme Court
    “shall determine which plan complies most accurately with the constitutional requirements and
    shall direct that it be adopted by the commission and publish as provided in this section.” Const
    1963, art 4, § 6, ¶ 7.19
    Since the commission’s inception, the apportionment of legislative districts has not been
    without conflict, causing our Supreme Court to preside over apportionment issues on several
    occasions. Or, as stated by Justice Brennan:
    The constitution creates a Commission on Legislative Apportionment.
    Four members are Republicans, four members are Democrats. Every ten years
    the Commission meets. Every ten years the Commission is unable to agree. [In
    re Apportionment of 
    Legislature—1972, 387 Mich. at 459
    , BRENNAN, J.,
    dissenting.]
    The very first commission after the adoption of the 1963 Constitution illustrates Justice
    Brennan’s point. In May 1964, our Supreme Court directed the commission to adopt a particular
    plan when the commissioners could not agree. In re Apportionment of State Legislature—1964,
    
    372 Mich. 418
    , 480; 126 NW2d 731 (1964). The United States Supreme Court then issued
    Reynolds v Sims, 
    377 U.S. 553
    ; 
    84 S. Ct. 1362
    ; 
    12 L. Ed. 2d 506
    (1964), ruling that the weighted
    land area/population formulae rules violated the Equal Protection Clause of the United States
    Constitution. The Court indicated that the states should “make an honest and good faith effort to
    construct districts, in both houses of its legislature, as nearly of equal population as is
    practicable.” 
    Id. at 577.
    Our Supreme Court then ordered the commission to adopt a different plan, the Austin-
    Kleiner plan, because it more closely aligned with Reynolds in that its districts contained
    population as nearly equal as practicable. In re Apportionment of State Legislature—1964, 
    373 Mich. 247
    ; 128 NW2d 721 (1964). An elector then challenged the Austin-Kleiner plan and again
    the commission could not agree, so again our Supreme Court was called upon. In re
    Apportionment of State Legislature—1965-1966, 
    377 Mich. 396
    , 474; 140 NW2d 436 (1966).
    The Court ultimately dismissed the challenge, but not before Justice Black suggested that the
    eight commissioners’ names be placed in a jury box, seven of them chosen at random, and those
    seven be directed to apportion the districts.20 
    Id. at 413.
    19
    The Supreme Court also has original jurisdiction over an elector’s application filed within 60
    days of the final publication of the plan. The Court may direct the secretary of state or the
    commission to perform their duties, review any final plan adopted by the commissioners and
    “shall remand such plan to the commission for further action if it fails to comply with the
    requirements of this constitution.” Const 1963, art 4, § 6, ¶ 8.
    20
    Perhaps that suggested procedure could be considered somewhat of a precursor to the VNP
    Proposal of randomly drawing candidates for the commission.
    -7-
    In 1972, after the Commission on Legislative Apportionment failed to settle on a plan,21
    the apportionment issue again was before our Supreme Court, which decided that the Hatcher-
    Kleiner plan most closely complied with the constitutional requirements, without addressing the
    constitutionality of the requirements themselves. In re Apportionment of State Legislature—
    
    1972, 387 Mich. at 458
    .
    Ten years later, our Supreme Court examined whether the commission’s authority
    continued despite the holding from the United States Supreme Court that the apportionment rules
    are unconstitutional and, if so, what standards governed. The Court held that Reynolds
    invalidated the weighted land area/population formulae and the remaining apportionment rules in
    Article 4 were “inextricably interdependent” and thus were not severable. Likewise, the
    commission’s functions, and the commission itself, were dependent on the rules and could not be
    severed. In re Apportionment of State 
    Legislature—1982, 413 Mich. at 116
    . The Court added
    that “[t]he matter should be returned to the political process in a manner which highlights rather
    than hides the choices the people should make.” 
    Id. at 138.
    Thereafter, rather than relying on a commission, which was held to be inextricably
    related to the apportionment formulae negated by the United States Supreme Court, the Michigan
    Supreme Court appointed Bernard J. Apol, former Director of Elections, to produce maps to
    conform with the pertinent apportionment rules.22 In 1982, the Court adopted Apol’s plan. In re
    Apportionment of State Legislature—1982, 
    413 Mich. 146
    ; 321 NW2d 584 (1982).
    Almost 10 years later, in a statement reflecting upon the 1982 decision, Justice Levin
    indicated that the people were to have adopted new apportionment rules:
    Another assumption of the compromise [within the 1982 decision] was
    that responsible persons would come forth and place on the ballot, and the people
    would adopt, new apportionment rules in time for the 1992 and 1994 elections.
    Indeed, that was one of the arguments for non-severability—to highlight the need
    for a new constitutional provisions regarding legislative apportionment. The
    Court’s exhortation has not been heeded. [In re Apportionment of State
    Legislature—1990, 
    437 Mich. 1208
    , 1211; 463 NW2d 713 (1990), LEVIN, J.,
    concurring.]
    In 1990, the Legislature failed to arrive at an apportionment. In re Apportionment of the
    State 
    Legislature—1992, 439 Mich. at 723
    . Lawsuits were filed and, in 1991, our Supreme Court
    appointed a panel of special masters to accomplish the reapportionment. 
    Id. at 724.
    This Court
    ultimately accepted, for the most part, the plan that the masters proffered. In re Apportionment
    of the State Legislature—1992, 
    439 Mich. 251
    ; 483 NW2d 52 (1992).
    21
    Notably, the commission still met, notwithstanding that the United States Supreme Court and
    the Michigan Supreme Court had ruled that much of the language regarding apportionment was
    not to be enforced. It was to be the final time that the commission was utilized.
    22
    The Apol standards require single member districts, which are areas of contiguous land and
    drawn by as equal population as possible.
    -8-
    In 1996, the Legislature enacted guidelines for the redistricting of senate and house of
    representative districts, see MCL 4.261 et seq. In 1999, the Legislature passed the congressional
    redistricting act, MCL 3.61 et seq. Thus, after the past two federal decennial censuses,
    redistricting has occurred without a commission, as the Legislature has decided the districts.
    With that history in mind, we turn to the VNP Proposal to amend the Constitution to create an
    independent citizen redistricting commission.
    E. THE VNP PROPOSAL
    The VNP Proposal seeks to make changes to 11 sections within three articles of
    Michigan’s 1963 Constitution: Article 4 (legislative branch), Article 5 (executive branch) and
    Article 6 (judicial branch).23 The majority of those changes are to Article 4, involving the
    existing commission on legislative apportionment. The VNP Proposal essentially would
    accomplish the following:
       Create an independent citizens commission regarding legislative apportionment;
       Set forth the parameters for the independent commission regarding its structure, operation
    and funding;
       Eliminate legislative oversight over the independent commission, vest original
    jurisdiction in the Supreme Court regarding challenges related to the independent
    commission, and create an exception in the power of the executive branch to the extent
    limited or abrogated by the independent commission.
    The VNP Proposal creates an exception to the legislative power of the state senate and
    house of representatives by exempting the new independent citizens redistricting commission
    from legislative control.24 The VNP Proposal retains the structure of the senate at 38 members
    elected from single member districts,25 and the structure of the house of representatives with 110
    members from single member districts apportioned on a basis of population. 26 However, the
    VNP Proposal eliminates the existing constitutional provisions in Const 1963, art 4, §§ 2-5
    relating to senate districts and representative areas and their corresponding rules for
    apportionment.27
    The VNP Proposal’s primary change is the replacement of the current commission on
    legislative apportionment with parameters for a new independent citizens redistricting
    commission. In place of the eight-member commission, the VNP proposal provides for 13
    commissioners; each major political party would have four members and the remaining five
    members would be declared independent voters.28 The pool of candidates would be drawn from
    23
    Specifically, the VNP Proposal modifies Article 4, §§ 1-6; Article 5, §§ 1, 2 and 4; and
    Article 6, §§ 1 and 4.
    24
    VNP Proposal art 4, § 1.
    25
    VNP Proposal art 4, § 2.
    26
    VNP Proposal art 4, § 3.
    27
    VNP Proposal art 4, §§ 2-5.
    28
    VNP Proposal art 4, § 6(1).
    -9-
    eligible registered Michigan voters.29 With certain exceptions, candidates would not be eligible
    to serve if they were current or former lobbyists, partisan elected officials or candidates, or a
    relative of a disqualified individual. 30
    Under the VNP Proposal, commissioners are to be chosen from a pool of applicants,
    which may include randomly selected voters.31 Applicants must submit a completed application,
    must attest under oath that they meet the qualifications, and must identify which of the two major
    political parties with which they are affiliated, or whether they do not affiliate with either party.32
    The VNP Proposal sets forth specific parameters and timelines for the application
    procedure, including that legislative leaders may strike candidates from consideration.33 The
    proposal also designates the funding process and provides for a cause of action should funding
    not occur.34
    The VNP Proposal includes considerable detail regarding the commission’s public
    hearings and contact with the public. It specifies directives regarding the commissioners’
    discussion of commission business, and aims to make records available to the public.35
    The VNP Proposal lists seven criteria for a redistricting plan, giving the most weight to
    population and geographic contiguity. 36 Additionally, the VNP Proposal describes guidelines for
    the commission’s adoption of a new redistricting plan and the publication of its related data.37
    Under the VNP Proposal, the Michigan Supreme Court has original jurisdiction regarding
    the independent citizens redistricting commission to: (1) direct the Secretary or commission to
    perform their respective duties; (2) review a challenge to any plan that the commission adopts,
    (3) remand a plan to the commission for further action if the plan does not comply with the
    requirements of the Michigan Constitution, the United States Constitution or superseding federal
    law.38 Only the commission, and no other body, shall promulgate and adopt a redistricting
    plan. 39
    In Article 5, involving the executive branch, the VNP Proposal continues vesting the
    power in the executive branch but excepts the independent citizens redistricting commission,
    noting that the commission’s powers are exclusively reserved for the commission.40 The VNP
    Proposal alters section 4, involving the establishment of executive branch commissions or
    29
    VNP Proposal art 4, § 6(1)(A).
    30
    VNP Proposal art 4, § 6(1)(B)-(E).
    31
    VNP Proposal art 4, § 6(2)(A)(i).
    32
    VNP Proposal art 4, § 6(2)(A).
    33
    VNP Proposal art 4, § 6(2).
    34
    VNP Proposal art 4, § 6(5)-(6).
    35
    VNP Proposal art 4, § 6(8)-(12).
    36
    VNP Proposal art 4, § 6(13)(A-G).
    37
    VNP Proposal art 4, § 6(14)-(15).
    38
    VNP Proposal art 4, § 6(19).
    39
    
    Id. 40 VNP
    Proposal art 5, §§ 1-2.
    -10-
    agencies, by adding the language “to the extent limited or abrogated by article v, section 2 or
    article iv, section 6,” the sections involving independent citizens redistricting commission.41
    With regard to Article 6, the judicial branch, the VNP Proposal leaves intact the power of the
    branch, except to the extent limited or abrogated by the independent citizens redistricting
    commission.42
    II. ANALYSIS
    [I]n the very rare case . . . when an ‘initiative petition does not meet the
    constitutional requires for acceptance,’ a court may find it necessary to intervene
    in the initiative process. But because the judicial branch should rarely interfere
    with the legislative process, such cases should be, and are, rare . . . . [Coalition
    for a Safer Detroit v Detroit City Clerk, 
    295 Mich. App. 362
    , 372; 820 NW2d 208
    (2012) (citations omitted).]
    This case is not one of the rare cases where this Court should intervene.
    The people of Michigan long have reserved the right to amend their constitution. City of
    Jackson v Comm’r of Revenue, 
    316 Mich. 694
    , 710; 26 NW2d 569 (1947); Scott v Secretary of
    State, 
    202 Mich. 629
    , 643; 
    168 N.W. 709
    (1918). To do so, they may bring an initiative petition
    before the voters by submitting a proposal to be placed on the ballot. Const 1963, art 12, § 2.
    Wolverine Golf Club v Secretary of State, 
    24 Mich. App. 711
    , 716; 180 NW2d 820 (1970), aff’d
    
    384 Mich. 461
    (1971). Any person or organization opposing the submission of an initiative
    petition may bring an action for mandamus to preclude the placement of that petition onto the
    ballot. See Hamilton v Secretary of State, 
    212 Mich. 31
    , 33; 
    179 N.W. 553
    (1920); Coalition for a
    Safer 
    Detroit, 295 Mich. App. at 371
    . In an exceptional case, a court may deem it necessary to
    intervene in the initiative process. See Detroit v Detroit City Clerk, 
    98 Mich. App. 136
    , 139; 296
    NW2d 207 (1980).
    A. MANDAMUS
    This Court has jurisdiction over this original action pursuant to MCL 600.4401(1) (“[a]n
    action for mandamus against a state officer shall be commenced in the court of appeals . . . .”).
    See also MCR 7.203(C)(2).43 The Secretary and the Board are “state officers” for mandamus
    purposes. See Comm for Constitutional Reform v Secretary of State, 
    425 Mich. 336
    , 338 n 2; 389
    NW2d 430 (1986). Further, Michigan Election Law provides that a person aggrieved by a
    decision of the Board may seek relief in the form of mandamus. MCL 168.479.44 Thus,
    41
    VNP Proposal, art 5, § 4.
    42
    VNP Proposal, art 6, §§ 1, 4.
    43
    Under that rule, this Court has jurisdiction over an action for “mandamus against a state
    officer.”
    44
    MCL 168.479 provides: “Any person or persons, feeling themselves aggrieved by any
    determination made by said board, may have such determination reviewed by mandamus,
    certiorari, or other appropriate remedy in the supreme court.”
    -11-
    mandamus is the proper remedy for a party seeking to compel election officials to carry out their
    duties. See, e.g., Wolverine Golf 
    Club, 24 Mich. App. at 716
    .
    This Court has the authority to issue a prerogative writ of mandamus, but mandamus is an
    extraordinary remedy. LeRoux v Secretary of State, 
    465 Mich. 594
    , 606; 640 NW2d 849 (2002);
    O’Connell v Director of Elections, 
    316 Mich. App. 91
    , 100; 891 NW2d 240 (2016). Whether a
    writ issues is within the discretion of the court. See Carter v Ann Arbor City Attorney, 271 Mich
    App 425, 438; 722 NW2d 243 (2006). In a mandamus action, this Court considers whether the
    defendant has a clear legal duty and whether the plaintiff has a clear right to performance of that
    duty. Attorney General v Bd of State Canvassers, 
    318 Mich. App. 242
    , 248; 896 NW2d 485
    (2016). Specifically, the plaintiff has the burden to show:
    (1) a clear legal right to the act sought to be compelled; (2) a clear legal duty by
    the defendant to perform the act; (3) that the act is ministerial, leaving nothing to
    the judgment or discretion of the defendant; and (4) that no other adequate
    remedy exists. [Twp of Casco v Secretary of State, 
    472 Mich. 566
    , 621; 701
    NW2d 102 (2005), YOUNG, J., concurring in part.]
    A clear legal right has been defined as a right “ ‘clearly founded in, or granted by, law; a right
    which is inferable as a matter of law from uncontroverted facts regardless of the difficulty of the
    legal question to be decided.’ ” Univ Medical Affiliates, PC v Wayne County Executive, 
    142 Mich. App. 135
    , 143; 369 NW2d 277 (1985) (citation omitted). The plaintiff has the burden to
    demonstrate an entitlement to the extraordinary remedy of a writ of mandamus. Herp v Lansing
    City Clerk, 
    164 Mich. App. 150
    , 161; 416 NW2d 367 (1987).
    Plaintiffs here include a duly registered ballot question committee (CPMC), a former paid
    employee of a political candidate (Spyke), and the parent of a person otherwise disqualified from
    serving on the proposed commission (Daunt). Spyke and Daunt contend that they will be
    aggrieved by the VNP Proposal because they would be precluded from serving on the
    redistricting commission pursuant to the revised criteria. They assert a clear legal right to have
    the Secretary and the Board reject the petition and not place it on the ballot.
    The Secretary has a clear legal duty to “[p]repare the form of ballot for any proposed
    amendment to the constitution or proposal under the initiative or referendum provision of the
    constitution to be submitted to the voters of this state.” MCL 168.31(1)(f). The Secretary
    argues, however, that her only remaining duty is to certify the ballot to the counties after Board
    certification.
    The Board has a clear legal duty regarding ballot questions, as it examines petitions to
    ascertain that they have sufficient signatures. MCL 168.476. The Board also makes an official
    declaration regarding the sufficiency of the petition. MCL 168.477(1). The Board’s duty is to
    certify the proposal after determining whether the form of the petition substantially complies
    with statutory requirements and whether the proposal has sufficient signatures in support. See
    Protecting Michigan Taxpayers v Bd of State Canvassers, __ Mich App __, ___; __ NW2d __
    (2018) (Docket No. 343566); slip op at 5 n 2. In essence, the Board ascertains whether sufficient
    valid signatures support the petition and whether the petition is in proper form.
    -12-
    “A ministerial act is one in which the law prescribes and defines the duty to be performed
    with such precision and certainty as to leave nothing to the exercise of discretion or judgment.”
    Hillsdale Co Senior Servs, Inc v Hillsdale Co, 
    494 Mich. 46
    , 58 n 11; 832 NW2d 728 (2013)
    (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    This Court has settled the question of whether the Board’s and the Secretary’s clear legal
    duties are ministerial where, as here, the parties dispute whether an initiative petition proposal is
    an “amendment” to, or a “general revision” of, the constitution. In Citizens Protecting
    Michigan’s Constitution v Secretary of State, 
    280 Mich. App. 273
    ; 761 NW2d 210 (2008), aff’d in
    result only 
    482 Mich. 960
    (2008), the panel explained that, because the determinations of whether
    a proposal is a general revision or an amendment to the constitution, and whether a proposal
    serves more than a single purpose, require judgment, they are not ministerial tasks to be
    performed by the Secretary or the Board. 
    Id. at 286-287.
    However, this Court is obliged to
    make the threshold determination of whether an initiative petition meets the constitutional
    prerequisites for acceptance on the ballot. 
    Id. at 283,
    291. Based on this Court’s decision, the
    Board and the Secretary would have a clear legal duty regarding the initiative petition. At that
    point, the act of the Board and the Secretary regarding the petition would be ministerial in nature,
    not requiring the exercise of judgment or discretion. 
    Id. at 291-292.
    Consequently, as we have
    determined that the VNP Proposal meets the constitutional prerequisites, the Secretary’s and the
    Board’s actions in placing it on the ballot will be ministerial.
    It does not appear to be disputed that plaintiffs had no other adequate remedy available in
    law or equity.
    Historically, challenges regarding a petition’s substance have been viewed as premature
    if brought before the initiative legislation comes into effect, see Hamilton, 
    212 Mich. 31
    , but
    challenges regarding the legality or sufficiency of the form of the petitions themselves may be
    entertained earlier, Leininger v Secretary of State, 
    316 Mich. 644
    ; 26 NW2d 348 (1947).
    Questions whether a petition meets the constitutional prerequisites for acceptance are ripe for
    review. Michigan United Conservation Clubs v Secretary of State, 
    463 Mich. 1009
    ; 625 NW2d
    377 (2001). Because the instant challenge is to whether the VNP Proposal is eligible to be on the
    ballot, the issue is ripe for review. See also, Citizens Protecting Michigan’s 
    Constitution, 280 Mich. App. at 283
    , 288.
    B. AMENDMENT VERSUS GENERAL REVISION
    Article 12, § 2 of Michigan’s 1963 Constitution addresses the amendment of the
    constitution via initiative petition. It sets forth the requirements for such a petition to be placed
    on the ballot and provides:
    Amendments may be proposed to this constitution by petition of the
    registered electors of this state. Every petition shall include the full text of the
    proposed amendment, and be signed by registered electors of the state equal in
    number to at least 10 percent of the total vote cast for all candidates for governor
    at the last preceding general election at which a governor was elected. Such
    petitions shall be filed with the person authorized by law to receive the same at
    least 120 days before the election at which the proposed amendment is to be voted
    -13-
    upon. Any such petition shall be in the form, and shall be signed and circulated in
    such manner, as prescribed by law. The person authorized by law to receive such
    petition shall upon its receipt determine, as provided by law, the validity and
    sufficiency of the signatures on the petition, and make an official announcement
    thereof at least 60 days prior to the election at which the proposed amendment is
    to be voted upon.
    Any amendment proposed by such petition shall be submitted, not less
    than 120 days after it was filed, to the electors at the next general election. Such
    proposed amendment, existing provisions of the constitution which would be
    altered or abrogated thereby, and the question as it shall appear on the ballot shall
    be published in full as provided by law. Copies of such publication shall be
    posted in each polling place and furnished to news media as provided by law.
    The ballot to be used in such election shall contain a statement of the
    purpose of the proposed amendment, expressed in not more than 100 words,
    exclusive of caption. Such statement of purpose and caption shall be prepared by
    the person authorized by law, and shall consist of a true and impartial statement of
    the purpose of the amendment in such language as shall create no prejudice for or
    against the proposed amendment.
    If the proposed amendment is approved by a majority of the electors
    voting on the question, it shall become part of the constitution, and shall abrogate
    or amend existing provisions of the constitution at the end of 45 days after the
    date of the election at which it was approved. If two or more amendments
    approved by the electors at the same election conflict, that amendment receiving
    the highest affirmative vote shall prevail.45
    The above language does not impose, or even suggest, limitation on the scope of a voter
    initiative proposing a constitutional amendment.
    In contrast, Article 12, § 3 of the 1963 Constitution, involves general revision of the
    Constitution via a constitutional convention and it provides:
    At the general election to be held in the year 1978, and in each 16th year
    thereafter and at such times as may be provided by law, the question of a general
    revision of the constitution shall be submitted to the electors of the state. If a
    majority of the electors voting on the question decide in favor of a convention for
    such purpose, at an election to be held not later than six months after the proposal
    was certified as approved, the electors of each representative district as then
    organized shall elect one delegate and the electors of each senatorial district as
    then organized shall elect one delegate at a partisan election. The delegates so
    45
    The 1835 Michigan Constitution included a passage regarding constitutional amendments,
    Const 1835, art 13, § 1, but limited those amendments to the Legislature. The 1908 Constitution
    permitted amendments by petition Const 1908, art 17, § 2.
    -14-
    elected shall convene at the seat of government on the first Tuesday in October
    next succeeding such election or at an earlier date if provided by law.
    The convention shall choose its own officers, determine the rules of its
    proceedings and judge the qualifications, elections and returns of its members. To
    fill a vacancy in the office of any delegate, the governor shall appoint a qualified
    resident of the same district who shall be a member of the same party as the
    delegate vacating the office. The convention shall have power to appoint such
    officers, employees and assistants as it deems necessary and to fix their
    compensation; to provide for the printing and distribution of its documents,
    journals and proceedings; to explain and disseminate information about the
    proposed constitution and to complete the business of the convention in an orderly
    manner. Each delegate shall receive for his services compensation provided by
    law.
    No proposed constitution or amendment adopted by such convention shall
    be submitted to the electors for approval as hereinafter provided unless by the
    assent of a majority of all the delegates elected to and serving in the convention,
    with the names and vote of those voting entered in the journal. Any proposed
    constitution or amendments adopted by such convention shall be submitted to the
    qualified electors in the manner and at the time provided by such convention not
    less than 90 days after final adjournment of the convention. Upon the approval of
    such constitution or amendments by a majority of the qualified electors voting
    thereon the constitution or amendments shall take effect as provided by the
    convention. 46
    Our courts long have recognized that an amendment is not the same as a general revision
    and have attempted to define the differences between them where the constitutional provisions
    themselves do not define the terms. Eight decades ago, in 1932, our Supreme Court discussed
    the fundamental distinctions between revision and amendment in Kelly v Laing, 
    259 Mich. 212
    ;
    
    242 N.W. 891
    (1932). The Court held that an initiative petition may encompass one proposed
    amendment, but may involve more than one section, provided “all sections are germane to the
    purpose of the amendment.” 
    Id. at 216.
    Another question raised in Laing was whether the
    changes at issue could be raised by amendment, or whether they comprised a general revision.
    The Court described the differences between the two concepts:
    ‘Revision’ and ‘amendment’ have the common characteristics of working changes
    in the charter and are sometimes used inexactly, but there is an essential
    difference between them. Revision implies a re-examination of the whole law
    and a redraft without obligation to maintain the form, scheme, or structure of the
    old. As applied to fundamental law, such as a constitution or charter, it suggests a
    convention to examine the whole subject and to prepare and submit a new
    instrument, whether the desired changes from the old be few or many.
    Amendment implies continuance of the general plan and purport of the law, with
    46
    Michigan’s 1835 Constitution contained a section regarding a constitutional convention. See
    Const 1835, art 13, § 2.
    -15-
    corrections to accomplish its purpose. Basically, revision suggests fundamental
    change, while amendment is a correction of detail. [Id. at 217.]
    Our Supreme Court added:
    An amendment is usually proposed by persons interested in a specific change and
    little concerned with its effect upon other provisions of the charter. [In contrast,
    t]he machinery of revision is in line with our historical and traditional system of
    changing fundamental law by convention, which experience has shown best
    adapted to make necessary readjustments. [Id. at 221-222.]
    One year after Laing, our Supreme Court had occasion to consider whether a proposal
    was a revision or an amendment in Sch Dist of City of Pontiac v City of Pontiac, 
    262 Mich. 338
    ,
    344; 
    247 N.W. 474
    (1933). The plaintiff argued that the proposal to limit property taxes that had
    been approved in the general election was so far-reaching as to invalidate the Constitution and
    thus was a general revision. The Court disagreed, concluding that it was an amendment because
    the proposal did not “interfere with” nor “modify” the operation of governmental agencies in
    such a way to render it a general revision.47 
    Id. at 345.
    In 2008, building on the precepts from Laing and Pontiac, this Court discussed the
    difference between an amendment of the constitution and a general revision of the constitution in
    Citizens Protecting Michigan’s Constitution, 
    280 Mich. App. 273
    . Regarding a complaint for
    mandamus filed by plaintiff CPMC concerning an initiative petition from Reform Michigan
    Government Now (RMGN) for the general election ballot, this Court analyzed the constitutional
    provisions governing an amendment, as compared to a general revision. The Court held that it
    was “absolutely clear” that the procedures for constitutional amendment could not achieve a
    general revision of the constitution. 
    Id. at 277.
    While the constitution provides for amendment
    under the initiative petition procedure Article 12, § 2, a general revision of the constitution can
    occur only by the constitutional convention procedure in Article 12, § 3. 
    Id. This Court
    decided that the courts also must consider “the degree to which the proposal
    interferes with, or modifies, the operation of government.” 
    Id. at 298.
    The more the proposal
    modifies or interferes with the operation of government, the more likely it is to be a general
    revision. 
    Id. The Court
    held:
    [T]o determine whether a proposal effects a ‘general revision’ of the constitution,
    and is therefore not subject to the initiative process established for amending the
    constitution, the Court must consider both the quantitative nature and the
    qualitative nature of the proposed changes. More specifically, the determination
    depends on, not only the number of proposed changes or whether a wholly new
    constitution is being offered, but on the scope of the proposed changes and the
    47
    In light of Laing and Pontiac from our Supreme Court, it is puzzling why intervening
    defendants chose to discuss alternate definitions of “amendment” and “revision.” We rely on the
    terms as defined in Laing, rather than the dictionary definitions proffered by intervening
    defendants.
    -16-
    degree to which those changes would interfere with, or modify, the operation of
    government. [
    Id. at 305
    (emphasis supplied).]
    The RMGN proposal in Citizens Protecting Michigan’s Constitution would have made
    myriad changes to the 1963 Michigan Constitution related to a far-ranging field of topics, from
    reducing the number of senators, representatives, appellate justices and judges, to granting any
    citizen standing for certain environmental lawsuits, to limiting lobbying activities; the opinion
    listed 29 distinct changes to a multitude of constitutional provisions. 
    Id. at 279-281.
    The
    proposal also would have created a new commission with authority over legislative districting,
    established rules for creating legislative districting plans and eliminated judicial review over
    districting plans. 
    Id. at 280.
    In total, it would have altered over two dozen sections of four
    articles within the constitution and added four additional sections. 
    Id. at 295.
    This Court decided that the RMGN proposal did not “even approach the ‘field of
    application’ for the amendment procedure.” 
    Id. at 305
    (citation omitted). The Court observed
    that the proposal would have modified “the fundamental governmental structure” under the
    Constitution. 
    Id. at 306.
    Moreover, it would have done so in an abrupt manner, within less than
    six months of the November 2008 election. 
    Id. at 306-307.
    The Court concluded that “[t]he
    substantial entirety of the petition alters the core, fundamental underpinnings of the constitution,
    amounting to a wholesale revision, not a mere amendment.” 
    Id. at 307.
    Our Supreme Court
    affirmed in result only and did not adopt this Court’s reasoning.48
    The RMGN proposal would have reorganized the operation of the whole state
    government. The same is simply not true in this case. Here, rather than proposing “sprawling
    compilations of changes” as characterized by plaintiffs, the VNP Proposal has a singular focus:
    to create an independent citizen redistricting commission with exclusive authority to establish
    redistricting plans for legislative districts. This case therefore is quickly distinguishable from the
    much broader RMGN proposal in Citizens Protecting Michigan’s Constitution.
    The question then becomes whether, under the Citizens Protecting Michigan’s
    Constitution legal framework, the VNP Proposal falls within the description of an amendment.
    Intervening defendants argue that this Court should limit Citizens Protecting Michigan’s
    Constitution to its own “highly unusual” facts, particularly because the Court set forth a
    qualitative/quantitative standard borrowed primarily from the decisions of other state courts.
    Nevertheless, we are bound by Citizens Protecting Michigan’s Constitution as a published
    decision issued after 1990, MCR 7.215(J)(1). But even in following Citizens Protecting
    Michigan’s Constitution, we keep in mind that Court’s clarification at the outset that its decision
    was not “to prevent the citizens from voting on a proposal simply because that proposal is
    allegedly too complex or confusing.” 
    Id. at 276.
    48
    In Justice Corrigan’s concurrence, she noted that this Court did not clearly err in its
    articulation of the difference between an amendment and a general revision or in its ultimate
    conclusion. Two justices agreed with her. Citizens Protecting Michigan’s 
    Constitution, 482 Mich. at 964
    (CORRIGAN, J., concurring). However, as noted, a majority of our Supreme Court
    did not adopt this Court’s reasoning.
    -17-
    Four years after Citizens Protecting Michigan’s Constitution, our Court had an occasion
    to consider whether a ballot initiative was an amendment or a general revision in Protect Our
    Jobs v Bd of State Canvassers (On Remand), unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of
    Appeals, issued August 27, 2012 (Docket No. 311828), aff’d on other grounds 
    492 Mich. 763
    (2012).49 The proposal would have added a new article 1, § 28 to provide the right to bargain
    collectively, and a new paragraph to article 11, § 5 to protect the collective bargaining right for
    classified civil service employees. CPMC challenged the proposal as, among other things, being
    a general revision rather than an amendment. 
    Id. at 1-2.
    This Court relied on the qualitative and
    quantitative test in Citizens Protecting Michigan’s Constitution. The Court acknowledged that
    the proposal might have an effect on provisions and statutes, but also observed that the proposal
    was confined to a single subject matter and directly added only one section to the constitution
    and changed one other. This Court resolved that the initiative proposal was “far more akin to a
    correction of detail than a fundamental change, when viewed in the proper context of the
    constitution as a whole.” 
    Id. at 2-3.
    This case falls somewhere between Citizens Protecting Michigan’s Constitution and
    Protect Our Jobs. The VNP Proposal is nowhere near as diverse and titanic as the RMGN
    proposal, but nor is it as concise as the proposal in Protect Our Jobs.
    Here, the VNP Proposal maintains the structure of a commission for legislative
    districting. It continues the general plans for a commission, but changes the details of how the
    commission members are chosen and the specifics regarding the commission’s operation. It does
    not seek to change fundamental law—senate and house members still will represent, and be
    chosen by, voters in legislative districts and the number of senators and representatives will not
    change, unlike the RMGN proposal. The VNP proposal was put forward by a ballot committee
    intent on a specific change: to modify the commission membership to provide for an
    independent commission to draw legislative lines, and restrict membership on the commission to
    those who essentially are not partisan elected officials or lobbyists. In short, the VNP Proposal
    was intended to remedy perceived abuses from partisan gerrymandering of districts. This
    proposal does not interfere with or modify the operation of the government in such a way as to
    render it a general revision. Here, the provision seeks only to modify the section of the
    constitution that involve a single, narrow focus—the independent citizen redistricting
    commission.
    We acknowledge that the Citizens Protecting Michigan’s Constitution Court commented
    upon a portion of the RMGN proposal dealing with the proposed changes to the districting
    commission:
    As just one example, the proposal strips the Legislature of any authority to
    propose and enact a legislative redistricting plan. It abrogates a portion of the
    judicial power by giving a new executive branch redistricting commission
    authority to conduct legislative redistricting. It then removes from the judicial
    branch the power of judicial review over the new commission’s actions. We
    49
    On later appeal in Protect Our Jobs, our Supreme Court did not address the general
    revision/amendment argument raised in this Court, but limited its analysis to the republication
    requirement of Const 1963, art 12, § 2 and MCL 168.482(3).
    -18-
    agree with the Attorney General that the proposal affects the ‘foundation power’
    of government by ‘wresting from’ the legislative branch and the judicial branch
    any authority over redistricting and consolidating that power in the executive
    branch, albeit in a new independent agency with plenary authority over
    redistricting. [Citizens Protecting Michigan’s 
    Constitution, 280 Mich. App. at 306
    .]
    The instant proposal does not wrest complete power from the legislative branch and the judicial
    branch, where the legislature retains the power to veto potential commission members and the
    judiciary retains control over challenges related to the commission. The proposal does shift the
    duty of redistricting from the Legislature to the independent commission, a commission that is
    similar in structure to the one described in our existing constitution. The proposal does not
    otherwise reduce general legislative power.
    With regard to our Supreme Court, the proposal provides for Supreme Court oversight in
    a similar manner to the existing constitutional provisions, but does preclude the Supreme Court
    from ordering the adoption of a plan other than that arrived at by the independent commission.
    The power of the executive branch would not be materially changed, although the commission’s
    functions would not be subject to control by the Governor. Plaintiffs seek to parse out these
    changes into 14 enumerated points, but those points merely seek to shift the Court’s focus from
    the forest to the trees. This issue should not be made more complicated than necessary.
    Further, the Citizens Protecting Michigan’s Constitution Court did not consider the
    proposed change in isolation, but as one part of the 29 items on the vast proposal. Citizens
    Protecting Michigan’s Constitution did not hold that an initiative could not succeed on any one
    of those 29 subjects; rather, it held that the petition encompassing all 29 changes could not be
    considered a mere amendment. We do not construe the proposed amendment here as so far-
    reaching in the framework of the constitution so as to be a reexamination of the whole section.
    Where our existing Constitution has provided for a commission to draw the districting lines, it
    follows that an independent commission to do the same would not be so violative of the
    Constitution so as to preclude this proposal from placement on the ballot.
    Moreover, the VNP Proposal is not wholly new. It does not create an entirely new
    commission regarding redistricting; the commission already exists in our Constitution, although
    admittedly it has not been active for decades given Reynolds. The VNP Proposal merely changes
    the method by which the commissioners will be chosen going forward and adds additional
    members who are avowed independent voters. It does not wholly impede legislative power,
    where legislative leaders retain the power to veto proposed commission members. Undeniably,
    it introduces new concepts,50 but it does so in a finite manner. The body of Michigan case law
    does not hold that the addition of new concepts within the framework of our existing constitution
    precludes an initiative petition.
    50
    VNP’s general counsel’s admitted as much in his August 9, 2017 memorandum to the Board:
    “Creating a ‘commission’ that is not subject to the oversight or authority of the executive branch
    is a new and significantly different concept not previously found within the 1963 Constitution.
    Further, though this commission would be housed within the legislative branch, its actions are
    not subject to approval or oversight by the Legislature. This is another new concept.”
    -19-
    Plaintiffs maintain that the VNP Proposal abandons core redistricting criteria that have
    existed since the State’s founding. Our Supreme Court has ruled that “[t]he basic building
    blocks of the apportionment rules are the counties.” In re Apportionment of State Legislature—
    
    1982, 413 Mich. at 125
    . The public policy issues raised by the proposal’s nonadherence to the
    county framework are not the province of this branch of government at this stage of the initiative
    petition process. We do not believe that the choosing of geographical legislative districts for
    representation is truly a “fundamental function” or an “operation of government.”
    With regard to the quantitative portion of the Citizens Protecting Michigan’s
    Constitution, the VNP Proposal changes eleven sections within three articles of the constitution.
    The essential changes can be quickly enumerated, yet plaintiffs repeatedly point out that the
    proposal would add 4,834 words to the constitution and even included a bar graph in their reply
    brief. VNP should not be penalized for including specific details within its proposal, particularly
    where many of the proposed additions are merely operational details.
    Plaintiffs also argue that the proposal is multifarious and goes beyond the scope of a
    single amendment. The VNP Proposal is undeniably detailed, but it is targeted to achieve a
    single, specific purpose. To the extent that plaintiffs urge this Court to accept that the meaning
    of an amendment includes a “short” correction to the existing constitution, we have found no
    such limitation in legal authority.
    Further, plaintiffs maintain that the proposal should have a lengthy explanation of its
    changes, pointing out that the information disseminated after the 1961-1962 Constitutional
    Convention included a 109-page pamphlet. Here, such a lengthy pamphlet would not be
    necessary to describe the changes proposed by the VNP Proposal, particularly when considering
    that the most recent constitutional convention resulted in myriad innovative changes to the
    existing constitution, including the mandate of equal rights protections and the establishment of
    the Civil Rights Commission.
    Plaintiffs also argue that the multifarious nature of the VNP Proposal is illustrated by the
    fact that it cannot be easily summarized into 100 words. This argument is premature, as the
    Director of Elections has not yet fulfilled her duty under MCL 168.32(2) to draft the 100-word
    summary.
    Plaintiffs add that some of the requirements of the proposal will be impossible to comply
    with, focusing on the requirement that the Secretary select commissioners in a manner that
    mirrors the demographic makeup of the state. That argument is irrelevant to the threshold
    question before this Court regarding whether the proposal is eligible to be placed on the ballot,
    but instead pertains to the merits of the proposal, an issue that is not before this Court.
    In sum, we opine that the VNP Proposal is closer to the proposal in Protect Our Jobs than
    to the proposal in Citizens. We hold that the VNP Proposal, although undeniably introducing
    new concepts, does not modify or interfere with the fundamental operation of government or
    create a wholly new constitutional provision so as to make it a general revision to the
    Constitution rather than an amendment.
    C. REPUBLICATION
    -20-
    Proposals to amend the Constitution must publish those sections that the proposal will
    alter or abrogate. Article 12, § 2 governs amendment of the constitution by petition and vote and
    it provides, in pertinent part: “Such proposed amendment, existing provisions of the constitution
    which would be altered or abrogated thereby, and the question as it shall appear on the ballot
    shall be published in full as provided by law.” The provision’s aim is to advise the voter of the
    amendment’s purpose and identify which provision(s) of the constitutional law it changes or
    replaces. Massey v Secretary of State, 
    457 Mich. 410
    , 417; 579 NW2d 862 (1998). Care must be
    taken, however, not to confuse the voter by publishing myriad constitutional provisions “which
    were or might be directly or only remotely, and possibly only contingently, affected by the
    proposed amendment.” Sch Dist of City of Pontiac v City of 
    Pontiac, 262 Mich. at 344
    .
    The Legislature has enacted the publishing requirements for petitions. MCL 168.482(3)
    provides in relevant part: “If the proposal would alter or abrogate an existing provision of the
    constitution, the petition shall so state and the provisions to be altered or abrogated shall be
    inserted, preceded by the words: ‘Provisions of existing constitution altered or abrogated by the
    proposal if adopted.’ ”51
    Our Supreme Court has held that an initiative petition must comply with mandatory
    statutory provisions that set forth requirements regarding a petition’s form. Stand Up for
    Democracy v Board of State Canvassers, 
    492 Mich. 588
    ; 822 NW2d 159 (2012).52 Where MCL
    168.482(3) contains the mandatory term “shall,” petitions must comply with the republication
    requirement. Protect Our 
    Jobs, 492 Mich. at 778
    . Provisions of the constitution must be
    republished on petitions where “a proposed constitutional provision amends or replaces (‘alters
    or abrogates’) a specific provision of the Constitution, that such provision should be published
    along with the proposed amendment . . . .” Sch Dist of City of 
    Pontiac, 262 Mich. at 344
    . Our
    Supreme Court has explained that an alteration or abrogation ensues “if the proposed amendment
    would add to, delete from, or change the existing wording of the provision, or would render it
    wholly inoperative.” Ferency v Secretary of State, 
    409 Mich. 569
    , 597; 297 NW2d 544 (1980).
    The fact that a proposed amendment will affect a provision does not inevitably mean the
    provision is “altered or abrogated.” 
    Id. at 596–597.
    In 2012, our Supreme Court observed that the republication requirement continued to be
    subject to debate, which inspired the Court to provide additional clarity. It reasoned that, to
    establish that a proposed amendment “alters” an existing provision such that republication is
    required, an amendment must: (1) add words to an existing provision; (2) delete words from an
    existing provision; or (3) change the wording in an existing provision. Protect Our 
    Jobs, 492 Mich. at 782
    . Consequently, the Court concluded that a new constitutional provision does not
    51
    We reject intervening defendants’ contention that the statutory republication requirement in
    MCL 168.482(3) is unconstitutional because it imposes undue burdens upon the exercise of the
    people’s right to propose amendments via voter initiative. Where our Supreme Court has applied
    the requirements of MCL 168.482 to voter initiative petitions, this Court is bound by that legal
    authority and thus does not consider the constitutionality of the statute.
    52
    Intervening defendants argue that Stand Up does not apply here because the language of Const
    1963, art 2, § 9, which was at issue in Stand Up, is substantially different from the language of
    Const 1963, art 12, § 2, at issue here. Notwithstanding, where our Supreme Court cited Stand
    Up in Protect Our Jobs, which involved Const 1963, art 2, § 2, this Court does likewise.
    -21-
    “alter” an existing provision where the new provision leaves completely intact the text of all
    existing provisions.53 
    Id. With regard
    to whether an amendment “abrogates” an existing provision, the Protect Our
    Jobs Court stated that “the ‘abrogation’ standard makes clear that republication is only triggered
    by a change that would essentially eviscerate an existing provision.” 
    Id. The Court
    went on to
    state:
    Our caselaw establishes that an existing provision of the Constitution is abrogated
    and, thus, must be republished if it is rendered ‘wholly inoperative.’ An existing
    constitutional provision is rendered wholly inoperative if the proposed
    amendment would make the existing provision a nullity or if it would be
    impossible for the amendment to be harmonized with the existing provision when
    the two provisions are considered together. That is, if two provisions are
    incompatible with each other, the new provision would abrogate the existing
    provision and, thus, the existing provision would have to be republished. An
    existing provision is not rendered wholly inoperative if it can be reasonably
    construed in a manner consistent with the new provision, i.e., the two provisions
    are not incompatible.
    Determining whether the existing and new provisions can be harmonized
    requires careful consideration of the actual language used in both the existing
    provision and the proposed amendment. An existing provision that uses
    nonexclusive or nonabsolute language is less likely to be rendered inoperative
    simply because a proposed new provision introduces in some manner a change to
    the existing provision. Rather, when the existing provision would likely continue
    to exist as it did preamendment, although it might be affected or supplemented in
    some fashion by the proposed amendment, no abrogation occurs. On the other
    hand, a proposed amendment more likely renders an existing provision
    inoperative if the existing provision creates a mandatory requirement or uses
    language providing an exclusive power or authority because any change to such a
    provision would tend to negate the specifically conferred constitutional
    requirement. [Id. at 782-783 (citations omitted).]
    The abrogation inquiry requires examination of the entire existing constitutional
    provision, as well as the provision’s “discrete subparts, sentences, clauses, or even, potentially,
    single words.” 
    Id. at 784.
    The petition must republish the entire provision if the proposed
    amendment “renders wholly inoperative” any of the existing provision’s components. 
    Id. The Court
    summarized its holding regarding republication as follows:
    1.      When the existing language of a constitutional provision would be
    altered or abrogated by the proposed amendment, republication of the existing
    provision is required.
    53
    “The phrase ‘the existing wording’ should be taken literally.” 
    Massey, 457 Mich. at 418
    .
    -22-
    2.     The language of the amendment itself, rather than how proponents
    or opponents of the amendment characterize its meaning, controls whether an
    existing provision would be altered or abrogated by the proposed amendment.
    3.      When the existing language of a constitutional provision would not
    be altered, but the proposed amendment would render the entire provision or
    some discrete component of the provision wholly inoperative, abrogation would
    occur and republication of the existing language is required.
    4.      When the existing language would not be altered or abrogated, but
    the proposed amendment would only have an effect on the existing language, and
    the new and existing provisions can be harmoniously construed, republication of
    the existing provision is not required.
    5.      When the existing language would not be altered or abrogated, but
    the proposed amendment would only have an effect on the existing language,
    thereby requiring that the new and existing provisions be interpreted together,
    republication of the existing provision is not required. [Id. at 791-792.]
    Additionally, the Protect Our Jobs Court cited Ferency’s caution against adopting an
    overly expansive definition of the terms “alter or abrogate” so as not to “chill” the people’s
    ability to amend the constitution. It added that petition circulators should not be required to
    append the entire constitution to their petition. 
    Id. at 780
    (citing 
    Ferency, 409 Mich. at 597-598
    ).
    The courts and the Legislature may not impose “undue burdens” on the people’s right to amend.
    Wolverine Golf 
    Club, 384 Mich. at 466
    (citation omitted).
    The VNP Proposal does not alter the challenged sections at issue because it does not add
    words, delete words or change words in the existing sections. Consequently, the analysis that
    follows examines only whether the VNP Proposal abrogates existing constitutional provisions.
    1. CIRCUIT COURT JURISDICTION
    Existing Const 1963, art 6, § 13 provides:
    The circuit court shall have original jurisdiction in all matters not
    prohibited by law; appellate jurisdiction from all inferior courts and tribunals
    except as otherwise provided by law; power to issue, hear and determine
    prerogative and remedial writs; supervisory and general control over inferior
    courts and tribunals within their respective jurisdictions in accordance with rules
    of the supreme court; and jurisdiction of other cases and matters as provided by
    rules of the supreme court.
    In the VNP Proposal, article 4, § 6(19) provides, in relevant part:
    The Supreme Court, in the exercise of original jurisdiction, shall direct the
    Secretary of State or the Commission to perform their respective duties, may
    review a challenge to any plan adopted by the commission, and shall remand a
    plan to the commission for further action if the plan fails to comply with the
    -23-
    requirements of this Constitution, the Constitution of the United States or
    superseding federal law.54
    Plaintiffs contend that the proposal creates original jurisdiction over redistricting matters
    in the Supreme Court instead of in the circuit court and that § 6(19) abrogates Const 1963, art 6,
    § 13 because it would divest the circuit court of its exclusive original jurisdiction. Notably, our
    current constitution already gives the Supreme Court authority over redistricting commission
    matters, Const 1963, art 4, § 6, ¶¶ 7-8.
    Also, the substance of Const 1963, art 6, § 13 would not be changed by the VNP
    Proposal. Article 6, § 13 does not have exclusive language. Rather, it provides the circuit court
    with jurisdiction in all matters not prohibited by law, which illustrates that the framers intended
    that the circuit courts’ jurisdiction would have exceptions. Article 6, § 13 therefore does not
    suggest that such jurisdiction cannot be limited or affected by other constitutional provisions.
    Indeed, our Courts recognize that exceptions to the circuit court’s jurisdiction exist.
    Plaintiffs cite Bowie v Arder, 
    441 Mich. 23
    ; 490 NW2d 568 (1992), for their proposition that the
    VNP Proposal abrogates Const 1963, art 6, § 13 because the change would be not “by law,” but
    by constitutional decree. Notwithstanding, the Bowie Court recognized that the circuit courts’
    jurisdiction may be subject to an exception where jurisdiction is “given exclusively to another
    court by constitution or statute . . . .” 
    Id. at 38.
    See also MCL 600.605.55 See also, Prime Time
    Int’l Distributing, Inc v Dep’t of Treasury, 
    322 Mich. App. 46
    , 52; 910 NW2d 683 (2017),
    observing that the circuit courts are presumed to have jurisdiction unless expressly prohibited or
    jurisdiction is given to another court by constitution or statute.
    Further, the VNP Proposal can be harmonized with Const 1963, art 6, § 13 because the
    only effect is that the circuit court will not have jurisdiction over the commission. In all other
    respects, Const 1963, art 6, § 13 remains unaffected. The existing constitutional provision has
    not been eviscerated. No abrogation therefore would occur because the existing provision would
    be neither negated nor rendered wholly inoperative.
    2. FREEDOM OF SPEECH
    Const 1963, art 1, § 5 provides as follows:
    Every person may freely speak, write, express and publish his views on all
    subjects, being responsible for the abuse of such right; and no law shall be
    enacted to restrain or abridge the liberty of speech or of the press.
    The VNP Proposal provides in article 4, § 6(11), in relevant part:
    54
    The proposed language appears on the petition in all capital letters, but for ease of readability,
    we have not used all capital letters.
    55
    That statute provides: “Circuit courts have original jurisdiction to hear and determine all civil
    claims and remedies, except where exclusive jurisdiction is given in the constitution or by statute
    to some other court or where the circuit courts are denied jurisdiction by the constitution or
    statutes of this state.”
    -24-
    The Commission, its members, staff, attorneys, and consultants shall not
    discuss redistricting matters with members of the public outside of an open
    meeting of the Commission, except that a commissioner may communicate about
    redistricting matters with members of the public to gain information relevant to
    the performance of his or her duties if such communication occurs (a) in writing
    or (b) at a previously publicly noticed forum or town hall open to the general
    public.
    Plaintiffs suggest that the VNP Proposal would restrict the free speech of commissioners.
    They argue that the restrictions on the liberty of speech would extend to matters beyond
    commission matters and they suggest that the restrictions are neither in the public interest nor in
    keeping with the rights of the public officials. We reject these policy arguments, as the issue
    before this Court is the alleged abrogation of existing constitutional provisions, not whether the
    VNP Proposal promotes sound social policy. We also point out that the speech of government
    employees may be subject to certain restrictions given the public employees’ potential to express
    views that are contrary to governmental policies; a citizen entering government service “must
    accept certain limitations on his or her freedom [of speech].” Shirvell v Dep’t of Attorney
    General, 
    308 Mich. App. 702
    , 733; 866 NW2d 478 (2015) (quotation marks and citations
    omitted).
    With regard to abrogation, none would occur because Const 1963, art 1, § 5 would
    remain fully operative. Section 6(11) of the VNP Proposal does not restrict all speech, but does
    place limits on matters related to official commission work. Commissioners would retain their
    right to speak freely, but when speaking on official business, they would be restricted to doing so
    in an open meeting, in writing, or at a publicly noticed public forum. That constraint is
    accounted for by the condition in Const 1963, art 1, § 5 that every person “is responsible for the
    abuse of that right [to free speech].” Thus, the right to free speech is not wholly unrestricted.
    Additionally, Const 1963, art 1, § 5 is not rendered a nullity because it has relevancy well
    beyond the scope of matters related to the commission. The VNP Proposal does not replace
    Const 1963, art 1, § 5, nor does it render that section wholly inoperative. Plaintiffs have taken a
    very broad view of the Protect Our Jobs standard, arguing that “any abrogation,” even a slight
    one, requires republication. A restriction, however, is not an abrogation—and Protect Our Jobs
    holds that the provisions must be impossible to harmonize. Republication is not required when
    the new proposed amendment would have only an effect on existing language. Protect Our
    
    Jobs, 492 Mich. at 791-792
    .
    3. APPROPRIATIONS CLAUSE
    The Appropriations Clause, Const 1963, art 9, § 17, provides:
    No money shall be paid out of the state treasury except in pursuance of
    appropriations made by law.
    The VNP Proposal sets forth article 4, § 6(5), in relevant part:
    Each commissioner shall receive compensation at least equal to 25 percent of the
    governor’s salary. The State of Michigan shall indemnify commissioners for
    -25-
    costs incurred if the Legislature does not appropriate sufficient funds to cover
    such costs.
    Plaintiffs contend that the existing provision is incompatible with the proposed
    requirement that the state compensate and indemnify commissioners for costs incurred even
    absent an appropriation.     They note that the proposal mandates indemnification of
    commissioners even if the Legislature does not approve sufficient funding.
    In examining the Appropriations Clause from the 1908 Constitution,56 our Supreme Court
    recognized that “the weight of authority” held that the clause did not restrict appropriations to
    enactments from the Legislature, but also afforded “a constitutional appropriation apart from any
    action by the legislature.” Civil Service Comm v Auditor General, 
    302 Mich. 673
    , 679; 5 NW2d
    536 (1942). But even so, the VNP Proposal accounts for the legislative appropriation, as it
    provides for a cause of action if the Legislature does not appropriate the funds—thereby
    indicating that the money is to come from the Legislature via an appropriation.
    Plaintiffs’ claims that the commission will have an unlimited budget and that the state’s
    assets will be subject to the “unrestricted whims” of the commissioners are irrelevant as they do
    not pertain to the question of whether the VNP Proposal abrogates the existing appropriations
    clause by setting forth a particular minimum budget for the commission and providing for a
    cause of action if the Legislature fails to appropriate the funds. The proposed § 6(5) does not
    require a payment from the State Treasury absent an appropriation, but merely provides for a
    constitutional cause of action should the Legislature fail to fulfill its obligation to fund the
    commission. To the extent that plaintiffs argue that the courts cannot order the Legislature to
    make an appropriation, that question need not be settled at this time. Here, the only question is
    whether the VNP proposed amendment replaces, renders wholly operative or eviscerates the
    appropriations clause. It does not.
    4. OATH OF OFFICE
    Const 1963, art 11, § 1 concerns the oath taken by public officers and provides:
    All officers, legislative, executive and judicial, before entering upon the
    duties of their respective offices, shall take and subscribe the following oath or
    affirmation: I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support the Constitution of
    the United States and the constitution of this state, and that I will faithfully
    discharge the duties of the office of ………. according to the best of my ability.
    No other oath, affirmation, or any religious test shall be required as a qualification
    for any office or public trust.
    The VNP Proposal sets forth article 4, § 6(2), in relevant part:
    (2) Commissioners shall be selected through the following process:
    (A) The Secretary of State shall do all of the following:
    56
    The language from the 1908 Appropriations Clause, Const 1908, art 10, § 16, is the same as
    the language in the current version.
    -26-
    * * *
    (III) Require applicants to attest under oath that they meet the qualifications set
    forth in this section; and either that they affiliate with one of the two political
    parties with the largest representation in the Legislature (hereinafter, ‘major
    parties’) and if so, identify the party with which they affiliate, or that they do not
    affiliate with either of the major parties. . . .
    Plaintiffs maintain that the existing provision requires only one oath, and the new
    provision would render the existing provision a nullity. The affirmation in proposed § 6(2)(a)(ii)
    is not an oath of office, but is merely an affirmation that the applicant satisfies the commissioner
    qualifications, which are enumerated in a separate section, § 6(1). This position finds support in
    Advisory Opinion on Constitutionality of 
    1975 PA 227
    , 
    396 Mich. 465
    , 510: 242 NW2d 3 (1976),
    where our Supreme Court ruled that an oath regarding financial disclosure was akin to the
    affidavits required to file a nominating petition under MCL 168.558.
    In contrast, the oath in Harrington v Secretary of State, 
    211 Mich. 395
    , 396; 179 NW2d
    283 (1920), cited by plaintiffs, required the candidate to swear in part that he would “support the
    principles of [the] political party of which he is a member if nominated and elected.” That
    loyalty oath was to cover the entire term of office, even after election, and for so long as he or
    she remained in office. In ruling that the oath was unconstitutional, the Court cited with
    approval the Attorney General’s reasoning that the candidate would be bound by an oath other
    than the constitutional oath of office. 
    Id. at 397.
    The same is not true here, as the oath required
    by the VNP Proposal relates only to the information on the application and does not bind a
    candidate once he or she becomes a commissioner.
    Thus, the existing oath of office provision is unaffected by the affirmation. The proposal
    does not make the existing constitutional provision a nullity.
    5. CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES
    In a footnote, plaintiffs add a final example, stating that VNP Proposal should have
    republished Const 1963, art 11, § 5, regarding civil service employees, where the Civil Service
    Commission has the authority to regulate “all conditions of employment in the classified
    service.” The VNP Proposal in art 4, § 6(21) provides:
    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no employer shall discharge,
    threaten to discharge, intimidate, coerce, or retaliate against any employee
    because of the employee’s membership on the commission or attendance or
    scheduled attendance at any meeting of the commission.
    Plaintiffs argue that if a civil service employee becomes a member of the commission,
    the Civil Service Commission’s authority over “all conditions of employment” will no longer be
    exclusive. This argument has been abandoned, as plaintiffs opted to give it cursory treatment.
    Huntington Nat’l Bank v Daniel J Aronoff Living Trust, 
    305 Mich. App. 496
    , 517; 853 NW2d 481
    (2014). Even so, the two provisions can be harmonized. Therefore, we cannot conclude that the
    proposal abrogates the existing provision.
    -27-
    D. CROSS-COMPLAINT
    Intervening defendants seek a writ of mandamus against defendants to direct defendants
    to comply with their duties concerning certification, approval and placement of the VNP
    Proposal on the 2018 general election ballot. We have concluded that plaintiffs’ complaint for
    mandamus should be denied. Consequently, intervening defendants’ cross-claim should be
    granted with respect to the Board, as the Board has the duty to make the final decision regarding
    the sufficiency of the petition. Intervening defendants also ask that this Court designate that its
    order have immediate effect pursuant to MCR 7.215(F)(2).
    III. CONCLUSION
    The complaint is without merit. The petition is not a general revision of the constitution,
    where it is narrowly tailored to address a single subject: the replacement of the current
    constitutional provision providing for an eight-member redistricting commission with a thirteen-
    member commission comprised of eight partisan members and five members who are declared
    independent voters not affiliated with either major political party. The VNP Proposal is confined
    to a single purpose, that of correcting the partisan aspects of the constitutional provisions
    regarding the redistricting commission and does so without interfering with the operation of
    government. Hence, we decide that the proposal is an amendment, albeit an amendment set forth
    in considerable detail, permitted by voter initiative. Also, the petition complies with the
    republication requirement. The petition neither abrogates nor alters the existing sections of the
    constitution as asserted by plaintiffs.
    The complaint for mandamus is denied and the cross-complaint is granted. Defendant
    Board is directed to take the necessary steps to place the proposal on the ballot for the general
    election. No costs, a public question being involved. This opinion is given immediate effect
    pursuant to MCR 7.215(F)(2).
    /s/ Mark J. Cavanagh
    /s/ Kirsten Frank Kelly
    /s/ Karen M. Fort Hood
    -28-
    Court of Appeals, State of Michigan
    ORDER
    Mark J. Cavanagh
    Citizens Protecting Michigan's Constitution v Secretary of State                Presiding Judge
    Docket No.     343517                                                          Kirsten Frank Kelly
    Karen M. Fort Hood
    Judges
    The Court orders that the complaint for a writ of mandamus is DENIED. The Voters Not
    Politicians proposal offered by intervening defendants does not set forth a general revision of the
    constitution, but is confined to the single purpose of modifying current constitutional provisions
    regarding the redistricting commission. Therefore, the proposed constitutional amendment in this case
    is permitted by way of a ballot initiative. See Citizens Protecting Michigan’s Constitution v Secretary of
    State, 
    280 Mich. App. 273
    ; 761 NW2d 210 (2008), aff’d in result only 
    482 Mich. 960
    (2008). Further, the
    petition complies with the republication requirement of MCL 168.482(3), where the petition neither
    abrogates nor alters the existing sections of the constitution as asserted by plaintiffs. Protect Our Jobs v
    Bd of State Canvassers (On Remand), 
    492 Mich. 763
    ; 822 NW2d 534 (2012).
    The cross-complaint is GRANTED. Defendants are directed to take all necessary
    measures to place the proposal on the November 2018 general election ballot. This order is given
    immediate effect pursuant to MCR 7.215(F)(2).
    /s/ Mark J. Cavanagh
    June 7, 2018
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 343517

Citation Numbers: 922 N.W.2d 404, 324 Mich. App. 561

Filed Date: 6/7/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (23)

Advisory Opinion on Constitutionality of 1975 PA 227 , 396 Mich. 123 ( 1976 )

Township of Casco v. Secretary of State , 472 Mich. 566 ( 2005 )

LeRoux v. Secretary of State , 465 Mich. 594 ( 2002 )

In Re Apportionment of State Legislature , 377 Mich. 396 ( 1966 )

In Re Apportionment of State Legislature—1982 , 413 Mich. 96 ( 1982 )

In Re Apportionment of State Legislature , 387 Mich. 442 ( 1972 )

Scholle v. Secretary of State , 367 Mich. 176 ( 1962 )

Bowie v. Arder , 441 Mich. 23 ( 1992 )

Ferency v. Secretary of State , 409 Mich. 569 ( 1980 )

In Re Apportionment, State Legislature-1992 , 439 Mich. 251 ( 1992 )

Civil Serv. Com'n v. Auditor Gen'l , 302 Mich. 673 ( 1942 )

School Dist. v. City of Pontiac , 262 Mich. 338 ( 1933 )

City of Jackson v. Com'r of Revenue , 316 Mich. 694 ( 1947 )

Kelly v. Laing , 259 Mich. 212 ( 1932 )

Scholle v. Secretary of State , 360 Mich. 1 ( 1960 )

Const Ref. Comm. v. SEC. of State , 425 Mich. 336 ( 1986 )

In Re Apportionment of State Legislature—1964 , 372 Mich. 418 ( 1964 )

Wolverine Golf Club v. Secretary of State , 384 Mich. 461 ( 1971 )

In Re Apportionment, State Legislature-1992 , 439 Mich. 715 ( 1992 )

Massey v. Secretary of State , 457 Mich. 410 ( 1998 )

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