Dec 14, 2020
Bill Bailey stands outside of the Antrim County Building in Bellaire on Sunday.Record-Eagle/Mike Krebs
BELLAIRE â Voters will have a chance to review a report generated by a recent examination of Antrim Countyâs voting machines, after a judge vacated his order requiring the results be kept private.
Attorneys from the Michigan Attorney Generalâs office â representing Michiganâs Secretary of State â agreed the information should be released, so long as any proprietary source code from Dominion voting machine software is redacted and the Secretary of State be allowed to rebut the report s contents.
Arguments over whether to make the information public took place Monday morning in front of 13th Circuit Court Chief Judge Kevin A. Elsenheimer, during an abruptly-scheduled remote hearing.
Lansing Michigan s attorneys filed their response Thursday to Texas s legal push to overturn battleground states election results, saying the lawsuit in the U.S. Supreme Court was unprecedented and without factual foundation.
Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, a Democrat, and three other employees of her office wrote that President-elect Joe Biden s 154,000-vote win in the state had already been certified by the Board of State Canvassers and upheld in state court decisions.
For the nation s high court to intervene would be an intrusion on the state s sovereignty, according to Nessel and her aides. The election in Michigan is over, they wrote. Texas comes as a stranger to this matter and should not be heard here.