Michigan: Affirmative action could be on 2006 ballot
Sunday, January 16, 2005 at 07:44PM
TheSpook
A group that opposes race- and gender-based preferences in university
admissions and government hiring said it submitted more than 508,000
petition signatures Thursday to state election officials, a move that
sets the stage early for a heated battle over a proposal that could
appear on the November 2006 ballot. Calling themselves the Michigan
Civil Rights Initiative, the supporters needed 317,757 signatures to
place the proposed constitutional amendment on the ballot. They ended
up with 508,202. Members said they expect no problems in getting enough
signatures certified by election officials. The group is financed by
Ward Connerly, a black University of California regent who led
successful battles to ban affirmative action in California and
Washington. "I think it's a challenge-proof initiative," Connerly said.
"But anyone who wants to challenge it - make my day." The proposed
amendment would prohibit governments from "discriminating or granting
preferential treatment based on race, sex, color, ethnicity or national
origin," as the ballot language reads. During a news conference in
Lansing, group leaders said they're not seeking an end to all
affirmative action programs. But opponents of the group claim they have
passed out fliers that read "help end 'affirmative action.'" "Here we
go again," said state Rep. Clarence Phillips, D-Pontiac and a member of
the Michigan Legislative Black Caucus, which joined a lawsuit last year
that challenged the petition. "This is one of those political wedge
issues that only divide groups against one another and communities
against one another. And I think it's a bad, bad time, coming off of a
divisive election. "I don't think we need this kind of thing." [more] and [more]
Pictured above: HATER of Blacks & Latinos, Ward Connerly, left, and Jennifer
Gratz talk about Michigan Civil Rights Initiative petition signatures
for a constitutional amendment during a news conference at the state
Capitol Thursday in Lansing, Mich.
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.