Warren Mayor James Fouts has followed through with his
planned (and frivolous) lawsuit seeking to wipe out the Aug. 5 statewide
election results on Proposal 1, which voters approved by a wide margin.
Fouts insists that the ballot language was confusing and
biased in favor of getting a “yes” vote from the electorate. But the mayor is
not asking for a re-vote; he just wants the result erased from history.
Of course, that’s an interesting approach for this “mayor
of the people,” especially since his own constituents, the Warren electorate,
voted for Proposal 1.
Fouts
The proposal, which phases out and replaces the state’s
Personal Property Tax on business machinery and equipment, was endorsed by
business, labor, law enforcement, and an all-star lineup of elected Republican
and Democratic officials.
Fouts, in his usual, quirky way, embraced his role as the
one-man opposition. Of course, Fouts, as mayor of one of the most
industrialized cities in Michigan, should have been leading the pro-Prop 1
parade. The mayor completely misunderstood the realpolitik of Lansing, where
the Republicans were ready to eliminate the PPT, without providing replacement
revenue, if the proposal failed at the ballot box.
So, who is Fouts suing? Just about anyone and everyone
whose fingerprints were on Proposal 1.
According to the MIRS news service, here is the lineup of
defendants named in the Court of Claims lawsuit: the senators who were primary sponsors of the
bill that created Prop. 1, Dave Hildenbrand (R-Lowell), Mark Jansen
(R-Cutlerville), Rebekah Warren (D-Ann Arbor), John Moolenaar
(R-Midland) and Jack Brandenburg (R-Harrison Twp.).; the Secretary
of State’s office (but not Secretary of State Ruth Johnson); SOS Bureau
of Elections Director Chris Thomas; the four members of the Board of
State Canvassers who approved the ballot language: Colleen Pero, Jeannette
Bradshaw, Norm Shinkle and Julie Matuzak (a longtime Democratic activist from
Macomb County); the Truscott Rossman Group, which is the public relations firm
that handled the pro-Prop 1 campaign; and Kelly Rossman-McKinney, who handled
the account.

Rossman-McKinney and PR partner John Truscott
 get the news that they’re part of Fouts’ silly suit
A veteran PR pro, Rossman-McKinney told MIRS that Fouts’ decision to sue her
and her firm was “amazing and amusing.”
Brandenburg
The part that I find particularly amusing is the thought of
Fouts battling it out, in court and in the political arena, with Brandenburg.
Both are outspoken and prone to bombastic quotes. But Brandenburg is an ex-jock
who towers over the feeble Fouts.

If it ever comes to a face-to-face confrontation, the
mayor better bring his baseball bat.