SIGNING A PETITION WITH MULTIPLE NAMES

House Bill 6107 as introduced

Sponsor:  Rep. Kimberly LaSata

House Bill 6108 as introduced

Sponsor: Rep. Jim Lilly

Committee:  Elections and Ethics

Complete to 6-7-18

SUMMARY:

House Bill 6107 would amend four sections of the Michigan Election Law to prohibit individuals from certain actions regarding the signing of nominating petitions, qualifying petitions, petitions to form a new political party, and recall petitions. It would also add a section prohibiting those same actions regarding petitions. (The five document types will be referred to collectively as petitions in this summary.)

Under the bill, any of the actions below would be a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of up to $500 or imprisonment for up to 93 days, or both:

·         Signing a petition with a name other than one’s own.

·         Making a false statement in a certificate on a petition.

·         If not a circulator, signing a petition as a circulator.

·         Signing as a circulator a name other than one’s own.

The bill would also make the action of signing a petition with multiple names a felony

If the Board of State Canvassers determined that a person knowingly and intentionally signed a nominating petition with multiple names, it could disqualify signatures and/or candidates who committed, aided, abetted, or knowingly allowed the violation. Certain individuals knowing of the violation and failing to report it would also be guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of up to $500 or imprisonment for up to 93 days, or both. 

MCL 168.544c et al., and proposed MCL 168.482a

House Bill 6108 would incorporate the signing of any of the five types of petitions with multiple names into the sentencing guidelines chapter in the Code of Criminal Procedure.  Under the bill, signing multiple names on a petition, nominating petition, qualifying petition, petition to form a new political party, or recall petition would be a Class E felony offense against the public trust punishable by a statutory maximum of 5 years. 

MCL 777.11d

House Bill 6108 is tie-barred to House Bill 6107, meaning that it could not take effect unless HB 6107 were also enacted.

FISCAL IMPACT:

House Bill 6107 would have an indeterminate fiscal impact on the state and on local units of government. The number of persons that might be convicted under provisions of the bill is unknown. New felony convictions would result in increased costs related to state prisons and state probation/parole supervision. In fiscal year 2017, the average cost of prison incarceration in a state facility was roughly $37,000 per prisoner per year, a figure that includes various fixed administrative and operational costs. State costs for parole and felony probation supervision averaged about $3,600 per supervised offender in the same year. New misdemeanor convictions would increase costs related to county jails and/or local misdemeanor probation supervision. The costs of local incarceration in a county jail and local misdemeanor probation supervision vary by jurisdiction. The fiscal impact on local court systems would depend on how provisions of the bill affected caseloads and related administrative costs. Any increase in penal fine revenues would increase funding for local libraries, which are the constitutionally designated recipients of those revenues.

House Bill 6108 amends sentencing guidelines and would not have a direct fiscal impact on the state or on local units of government.

                                                                                        Legislative Analyst:   Jenny McInerney

                                                                                                Fiscal Analyst:   Robin Risko

This analysis was prepared by nonpartisan House Fiscal Agency staff for use by House members in their deliberations, and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent.