The WØRD – “Results”
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From the Chair…
In the 2022 campaign, Michigan Democrats promised a wave of action on issues blocked (sometimes for years) by previous Republican legislatures. Those promises are being kept. In the last week, the Legislature has finalized more than 2-dozen bills, adding to earlier laws already enacted on LGBTQ+ civil rights, worker rights and reproductive healthcare freedom.
Highlighting the week’s action: bills headed to Governor Whitmer that not only implement the Voter Protection constitutional amendment, but expand on that amendment with even greater election reforms.
Also passed this week:
- Prohibiting mental health professionals — such as social workers, therapists, physicians, nurses, counselors and psychologists — from conducting conversion therapy on children to try to change their gender identity or sexual orientation.
- Designating June 19th as “Juneteenth” – a celebration which commemorates the emancipation of African Americans and the freeing of the final slaves in the Confederacy on June 19, 1865, more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation.
- Legislation requiring physicians to test children up to 6 years old for lead exposure. The bill cleared the Senate on Wednesday and will head to the House. Under the proposal, children must be tested when they turn 1 and once again when they turn 2. If a child older than 2 has never been tested, they must be tested between the ages of 2 and 6.
In areas where there is a “high risk of child lead poisoning,” with children diagnosed with lead poisoning or people living in a house built before 1978, children must be tested when they are 4 years old. - A six-bill package to guard against sexual abuse against children and patients. The package comes five years after the conviction of Larry Nassar, former Michigan State University physician and U.S. Gymnastics team doctor who sexually assaulted hundreds of girls and women under the guise of medical treatment.
- The Senate passed legislation to allow public universities to serve alcohol at college sports events.
Michigan State University and University of Michigan would join 11 other Big Ten Conference universities in allowing alcohol sales in college stadiums. Bill sponsor Sen. Sean McCann (D-Kalamazoo) said universities allowing alcohol sale at games saw a drop in binge drinking, because there is less incentive to “preload.”
Next up for the Legislature: finalizing the state’s budget for the new fiscal year. Both appropriations committees are hard at work putting the finishing touches on Michigan’s fiscal priorities for the 2023-24 budget year.
All of this positive action is in marked contrast to what’s happening with Republicans running the U.S. House. Thanks to the loud voices of ultra-right-wing zealots led by Marjorie Taylor Greene, Lauren Boebert, Matt Gaetz and a handful of others, Congress is virtually paralyzed … which threatens a possible federal government shutdown, disrupting the nation and (ironically) increasing the budget deficit because of expenses created by that shutdown.
Major election reform bills have cleared the state House and Senate. These bills will make Michigan one of the best states in the nation for voter rights — just the opposite of voter suppression laws being pushed in Republican-controlled legislatures. Joining us on the podcast this week: the chair of the state House Elections Committee, East Lansing Representative Penelope Tsernoglou.
Born in Metro Detroit, Rep. Tsernoglou grew up in Southfield and attended Southfield Public Schools. She received an undergraduate degree from the University of Michigan, with majors in psychology and sociology. After graduating from Michigan State University-Detroit College of Law, she worked as a victims advocate for End Violent Encounters (EVE), Lansing’s first shelter devoted to survivors of domestic violence, stalking and sexual assault. Through EVE, she worked at the Personal Protection Order office and the Domestic Violence Support Unit in the Ingham County Sheriff’s Office. She later worked as a defense attorney representing indigent defendants and juveniles in Ingham and Eaton Counties.
She is a small business owner, and former three-term member of the Ingham County Board of Commissioners.
News on Politics and Policy
- Michigan lawmakers OK early voting, conversion therapy ban, Juneteenth holiday – Bridge Michigan
- New Proposal 2 voting laws pass Michigan Legislature – WILX TV
- Michigan moves to adopt early voting; Republicans say efforts go too far – Bridge Michigan
- Michigan could join states in the national popular vote compact – Michigan Advance
- Voting Laws Roundup: June 2023 – Brennan Center for Justice
- Lawmakers revive efforts to expand time sex abuse victims have to sue – Lansing State Journal
- Motor City Pride participants praise expansion of civil rights laws – Detroit News
- Michigan panel asks attorney general if book bans violate civil rights law – Detroit News
- Michigan Capitol gun ban could be in place by Labor Day – Lansing State Journal
- Why Gretchen Whitmer Has What It Takes for a White House Run – Vanity Fair
- Gov. Whitmer Announces New LGBTQ+ Commission at Motor City Pride – Pride Source
- Michigan civil rights law updated to ban hair discrimination – Detroit Free Press
- Democrats meet with anti-Trump conservatives to fight No Labels 2024 bid – The Washington Post
- Michigan GOP chair must pay for Detroit election lawsuit – Detroit Free Press
- Michigan GOP split over new plan to select presidential delegates – Detroit Free Press
- The Trump Documents Case Puts the Justice System on Trial – The New York Times
- Trump centers campaign on his prosecution, vilifying legal system – The Washington Post
- The GOP ‘bribery’ allegations against Biden remain transparently thin – The Washington Post
- Trump allies cite Clinton email probe to attack classified records case. There are big differences – AP News
- Hillary Clinton’s Emails: A Nation Struggles to Unsubscribe – The New York Times
- ‘MAGA vs. ultra-MAGA’: Michigan’s Republican Party at war with itself – The Washington Post
- College athletes could unionize under bill being considered by Michigan House – Detroit News
- MSU wants alcohol on gameday, but sees “very low” chance of sales by football season – The State News
The people charged with leading our state should expect to be held to account for the actions they take as public officials. That is at the heart of a new initiative by your state Democratic Party: holding Republicans in the Legislature accountable for how they vote on critical issues.

Democrats are also acting to reinforce a basic principle of democracy: guaranteeing that the candidate who gets the most votes wins the election. The United States is the only democracy on the planet where the second-place finisher in a national election can win. It has happened twice in the 20 years: the candidate for President who finished second in the voting was still sworn into office anyway thanks to the arcane Electoral College. There’s a national movement to stop this. We’re joined by the House sponsor of legislation supporting the National Popular Vote, Rep. Carrie Rheingans.
Joining us to discuss how Democrats in the Legislature are working with our local leaders to make our communities safer is Lansing’s dynamic Mayor Andy Schor. 

Building a legacy is the foundation for why we work so hard in politics. Our mission is to leave our children and grandchildren a legacy of a better life.


Joining the podcast this week is Representative Regina Weiss, chair of the appropriations sub-committee on education, to gives us details of what is the single most important item in the state’s budget: school aid. Rep. Weiss is serving her second term representing the 6th House District which encompasses Huntington Woods and parts of Berkley, Oak Park, Royal Oak, Detroit, and Royal Oak Township.
Democracy.
The daughter of UAW retirees and the first Black woman to serve as state representative in Lansing’s history, Senator Anthony is a champion of working families and marginalized communities. She is the Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee and is serving her first term in the Michigan Senate.

Joining the podcast this week is one of the primary sponsors of the Clean Energy Future bills, Senator Sue Shink.