Reproductive rights, including abortion, are in jeopardy in Michigan despite voters overwhelmingly passing a ballot measure in 2022 to amend our state constitution to enshrine these protections. But it is not only our reproductive rights that are under threat. Free speech, LGBTQ+ rights, immigrant rights, public education, and more are in the crosshairs of the powerful and well-funded conservative think tank Project 2025.

Voter Information Hub 

As the executive director of the ACLU of Michigan, a nonpartisan organization dedicated to protecting constitutional rights and civil liberties, I am deeply disturbed by Project 2025 and its vision for America outlined in its playbook, Mandate for Leadership: The Conservative Promise.

Project 2025 intends to operationalize their 900-plus-page policy plan, published by the Heritage Foundation and backed by more than 100 conservative groups, the first 180 days of the next conservative presidency. If set in motion, it will trample our most fundamental rights and freedoms and undermine our democracy.

In a sense, Project 2025 transcends partisan politics. This is a question of democracy vs. authoritarianism.

It is a roadmap to tyranny.

The forces propelling America in that direction are not going to disappear. It is a movement that must be thwarted whenever and wherever it arises.

The ACLU is no stranger to challenging elected leaders when they violate the rights promised by the U.S. Constitution. We have sued the Obama, Biden, Bush, and Trump administrations, and others before them, to protect the civil rights and liberties of those living in the United States.

The assaults on civil rights and civil liberties under the Trump presidency were unprecedented. Despite the ACLU filing more than 400 legal actions for violating civil rights and liberties, his current campaign promises a Project 2025 turbo-charged second Trump presidency – one that would be disastrous for the most fundamental tenets of democracy.

Although Project 2025 will continue to pursue its policy agenda for years to come, the most pressing threat to the future of our democracy is the November election.

Threatening our rights

If Project 2025 has its way, legal abortion will be abolished in Michigan and nationwide.

“Project 2025 calls for taking a medication used for most abortions off the shelves, allowing states to prevent hospitals from providing abortions to patients in life-threatening emergencies, and even using a law from the 1800s to prosecute abortion providers nationwide,” according to Brigitte Amiri, ACLU Deputy Director of the Reproductive Freedom Project.

The national abortion-rights group, Reproductive Freedom for All describes Project 2025’s plan this way: “The extensive mandate calls to gut reproductive freedom … attacking contraception, deploying fetal personhood, and undermining IVF in federal policy. From deleting the word ‘abortion’ from every ‘federal rule, agency regulation, contract, grant, regulation, and piece of legislation that exists.”

The same dangerous mindset can also be found in Project 2025’s open hostility toward LGBTQ+ people and their rights. It aims to gut protections for the LGBTQ+ community and would eliminate any federal policies that promote LGBTQ+ equality.

As if that weren’t bad enough, Project 2025 goes even further, calling for an America where, in the eyes of the federal government, LGBTQ+ people don’t exist at all and efforts to promote diversity are completely erased. Project 2025’s playbook details how it would achieve that goal:

“This starts with deleting the terms sexual orientation and gender identity (‘SOGI’), diversity, equity, and inclusion (‘DEI’), gender, gender equality, gender equity, gender awareness, gender-sensitive, abortion, reproductive health, reproductive rights, and any other term used to deprive Americans of their First Amendment rights out of every federal rule, agency regulation, contract, grant, regulation, and piece of legislation that exists.”

“Transgender people could be criminalized for their very existence,” warns Jay Kaplan, Nancy Katz & Margo Dichtelmiller LGBTQ+ Rights Project Staff Attorney.

Threat to voting rights

Project 2025 also poses a significant threat to the foundation of our democracy by undermining voting rights. Their plan would shift responsibility for prosecuting election-related offenses from the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division to the Criminal Division. According to The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights (LCCHR), “This will open the door to sham investigations and aggressive prosecutions of voters and election officials” which would serve “to intimidate state and local election workers already under threat and could criminalize election administration disputes.”

Our elections would also be undermined by Project 2025’s plan to end the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) efforts to combat online disinformation and threats to secure elections, as well as requiring state and local recipients of DHS grant funding to commit to sharing voter registration databases. “This would interfere with state maintenance of voter lists in order to cast doubt on the legitimacy of election results and allow the administration to collect voter rolls in order to deploy aggressive voter purges that disenfranchise voters,” according to the LCCHR.

Immigrant rights under attack

Also of great concern is its “extreme anti-immigrant approach to the border,” says Maribel Hernandez Rivera, ACLU Director of Policy and Government Affairs, Border, and Immigration. Project 2025’s playbook states that it will prioritize border security and immigration enforcement, including detention and deportation.

Couple that with a central promise of Trump’s 2024 campaign to “carry out the largest domestic deportation operation in American history” once in office. If re-elected, Trump plans to quickly expand deportation operations on “day one,” deporting millions of people a year and detaining untold numbers of people in massive camps pending deportation.

Protecting democracy together

While former President Donald Trump claims to disavow even knowing anything about 2025 – despite that many of the former president’s closest policy advisers are heavily involved in the project – his campaign platform Agenda 47 mirrors parts of Project 2025’s plans.

ACLU legal, legislative, and policy experts examined the records of both presidential nominees and their visions for the country. Our analysis detailed in 13 memos lays out both challenges and opportunities each candidate poses regarding the ACLU’s priority issues, including abortion access, LGBTQ+ rights, First Amendment freedoms, racial equity, immigrant rights, criminal legal reform, and more. Our memos also map out how we will advance any executive action to protect civil rights and liberties and fight any executive action that threatens them.

I am confident we can defeat Project 2025. While they have a 900-plus page plan to undermine democracy, we have a more than 100-year record of fighting to protect it.

But we don’t do this work alone. Along with our national ACLU office and 53 sister affiliates across the country, we have millions of supporters, volunteers, donors, cooperating attorneys, and coalition partners who are with us.

In 2022, thousands of people across our state and beyond volunteered, donated money, knocked on doors, and voted overwhelmingly to protect reproductive rights in Michigan. We can succeed again by bringing that same fierce energy and commitment to protecting all our rights by making our voices heard.

Defeat Project 2025. Vote 2024.

Date

Wednesday, October 9, 2024 - 2:00pm

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Fight back by voting in the upcoming election.

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Vote Down Ballot Election Day Support More Links

 

Are you ready to vote, Michiganders? 

Know your rights this Election Day!

if you haven’t yet cast your ballot, we’re here to remind you how, and to urge you to fill out your full ballot, including down ballot races and the nonpartisan section!  

HOW TO VOTE ON NOVEMBER 5:  

In Person: 

  • Polls are open Tuesday, November 5, from 7am-8pm. Confirm your polling place at mi.gov/vote. 
  • If you are in line at 8pm, you can still vote so stay in line!  
  • Remember, don’t wear or bring campaign- or candidate-related clothing, accessories, or signage – you will be asked to remove it. 
  • If you need help or have any questions, call the election protection hotline at (866) OUR-VOTE. 

Absentee

  • You have until 8pm to return your absentee ballot! You can return it directly to your clerk OR at a secure ballot drop box. 

Still need to register to vote? No problem – you can register until 8pm on November 5. Simply visit your local clerk’s office and bring proof of residency.  

Voting is the cornerstone of our democracy, and it is strongest when we all make our voices heard. So, vote, vote, vote! And if you already took advantage of Michigan’s early voting period, share this information with friends and family who haven’t cast their ballots yet. 

Help your neighbor - use the VAT!

VAT

A Voter Assist Terminal (VAT) allows people with vision, hearing, and other impairments vote in private without the help of others. 

Every polling place is required to have a VAT on-site that works and is in plain view. 

A lot of times, the VAT is not prepared and needs to be found and set up. 

When someone asks to use the VAT, it can cause commotion with poll workers, and draw unwanted attention from a person just trying to vote.  

Hear from our friend and West Michigan Volunteer, Terry DeYoung on how you can help your neighbors have easier access to the VAT at your polling place. 

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3 things you can do
Three things you can check right now to ensure you're ready.

Election Day may be November 5th, but that doesn’t mean you can’t cast your ballot now – or prepare to do so early.

There are a few easy things you can do right now to ensure you’re ready to vote - and it only takes a minute.

Here’s a handy checklist:

  • Check your voter registration. To register, you will need to register to vote in person at your city or township clerk’s office with proof of residency. You have until 8pm on Election Day to vote, but why wait? Register to vote as soon as possible.
     
  • Vote via absentee ballot – they're available to voters now. You can also visit your clerk’s office and vote in person via absentee ballot from now to Election Day. If you’d like to request an absentee ballot, we recommend doing so no later than October 15 to ensure you have time to fill it out and return it to the clerk’s office by the deadline (8pm on Election Day in most cases).
     
  • Make an early voting plan. If you prefer to vote in person, you can take advantage of Michigan’s 9 days of early voting! Beginning October 26, you can visit your early voting location and cast your ballot – it's a secure and convenient option to vote ahead of Election Day. You can learn more about early voting, including where you can cast your vote early by visiting michiganvoting.org. 

Whether you choose to vote absentee, early in person, or on Election Day, don’t forget to vote your full ballot, including the nonpartisan section.

Why voting your entire ballot is important. 

Get Involved

We are in the midst of a crucial election season – and you may be looking for impactful ways to support our democracy.

Look no further – join the ACLU of Michigan as we work to ensure that all eligible voters have what they need to cast their ballots on or before November 5.

Volunteer with the ACLU

Did you know that phone banking is one of the most effective ways to connect with voters? The ACLU’s organizing team is holding weekly phone banking sessions virtually on Zoom. Sign up to volunteer here! You will be trained and fully supported by the ACLU of Michigan’s organizing team during the entire session.

Similarly, we are also reaching out to voters via text. If you’d like to join a text banking session, you can sign up here.

Keep a look out for in-person phone banking opportunities coming up as we get closer to Election Day!

Election Protection

Sign up to be a non-partisan election challenger

This is a direct way to ensure all eligible voters can cast their ballots at their polling location. We need poll challengers from the start of early voting (October 26) through Election Day (November 5). Click here to sign up.

Sign up to be a canvass monitor

As a canvass monitor, you'll observe the post-election canvass and certification process to ensure that everything runs smoothly. All canvass monitors are required to complete a training prior to observation. The canvass process will begin after the election is complete and you will be contacted to sign up for an observation shift once counties have scheduled their canvass proceedings. Click here to sign up.

Events

Helpful Links

We’ll be sending out more information in the coming days, so be sure to come back for more updates.

Happy voting!

Date

Tuesday, October 1, 2024 - 4:00pm

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