DETROIT, MI (WKZO AM/FM) — Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson announced on Thursday, February 15 that she is working with state lawmakers to ban firearms at polling places and enact a Voting Rights Act for the state of Michigan.
Benson made the announcement at this week’s annual Judge Damon Keith Memorial Soul Food Luncheon in Detroit.
“The time for only thoughts and prayers is over,” said Benson, noting that many states, including Georgia, already ban firearms in polling places. “The time for taking action to ensure Michiganders are safe – in schools, in grocery stores, in places where we vote and everywhere in between – is now.”
At the luncheon, Benson went onto say, “Our kids deserve to go to school free from fear of gun violence. They deserve to go to church or synagogues or mosques with their families to worship free from fear of gun violence. They deserve to live in a democracy where their voices are heard and where they can cast their ballots free from intimidation or threats of violence. That is the world I am fighting for. ”
Benson announced the provision as part of a Michigan Voting Rights Act that she is working with lawmakers to pass this year, which would ban firearms within 100 feet of polling places and other election venues.
The Act would also mirror and expand upon existing state constitutional protections that Michigan voters enacted in 2022 to protect and expand the voting rights of citizens throughout the state.
The Act also proposes to:
- Prohibit voter suppression in the state of Michigan;
- Expand the number of jurisdictions that must translate election-related information into languages other than English;
- Enhance and clarify protections for voters with disabilities or others who need assistance to participate in elections;
- Prohibit intimidation, coercion, and deceptive practices in elections.
Benson is set to draft the draft the Act with the input of clerks, voting advocates and other stakeholders and is working directly with state representatives and senators who serve on their respective chamber’s elections committee, including Senetor Jeremy Moss, chair of the Senate Elections and Ethics Committee; Senator Darrin Camilleri; Senator Stephanie Chang; and Senator Sylvia Santana, as well as Representative Penelope Tsernoglou, chair of the House Elections Committee.