Heartland Signal: Mike Rogers mischaracterizes voting process for Michiganders without photo IDs
LANSING — Heartland Signal reported on Aug 27th, that Mike Rogers “mischaracterizes” the “voting process for Michiganders” as he casts more “election skepticism,” saying it’s “‘really very concerning for us.’”
Rogers pushed election conspiracy theories and called the election process “concerning,” while he ignored the facts in favor of mocking the election process saying “no, gee whiz.”
This follows other reports of Rogers “avoiding discussion about the 2020 vote.” The Washington Post notes that Rogers “told a Detroit News columnist that he expected cheating this fall and Republicans needed ‘an overwhelming win so there’s no question about our victory’” and refuses to “directly address whether he believes Biden won in 2020.”
“Mike Rogers will say and do anything to advance his own interests, even if it means undermining our democracy. It’s clear that there’s nothing and no one Rogers won’t sell out to benefit himself, even if it’s at the expense of Michigan and our democracy,” said Michigan Democratic Party spokesperson Sam Chan.
Read Heartland Signal’s reporting on Rogers casting more “election skepticism:”
Heartland Signal: FACT CHECK: Mike Rogers mischaracterizes voting process for Michiganders without photo IDs
- While on Newsmax last week, Michigan Republican Senate nominee Mike Rogers mischaracterized how voters in the state can cast their ballots without a photo ID, failing to note it involves a legally binding affidavit.
- During an Aug. 21 appearance on “Carl Higbie Frontline,” Rogers discussed a lawsuit from the Republican National Committee against Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson over voter roll maintenance when he pivoted to the state’s voter ID laws.
- “And by the way, what they tell you is if you don’t show up with an ID, you can sign a piece of paper that said, ‘No, gee whiz, I really am ‘fill in the blank,”” Rogers said. “It should make you feel a lot better about how that’s handled in the state of Michigan. So it is concerning.”
- Rogers also pledged that “ballot integrity people” were being recruited.
- This characterization of how voting without a photo ID in Michigan does not bring up precautions and legal steps taken in validating votes. While the state’s Department of State encourages people to bring photo IDs to polling places if they have them, it is not required. However, in order to cast a ballot without a photo ID, the prospective voter must sign a legally binding affidavit affirming who they are and where they live.
- According to the affidavit itself, making any false statement on it is perjury, a felony in Michigan that is “punishable by a fine up to $1,000.00 or imprisonment for up to 5 years, or both.”
- This has been the law in Michigan since 2007, with the Department of State holding dozens of uncontested elections since then. The law was originally a Republican idea to push towards photo ID requirements at polling places, according to Outlier Media’s Alex Klaus. Rogers himself won three elections for Congress under that photo ID rule.
- Rogers’ pivot towards premature election skepticism is an almost complete reversal to where the former congressman’s position was just a handful of years ago. In May, the Washington Post’s Patrick Marley profiled Rogers’ stance changing from being outspoken that the 2020 election was legitimate to either casting doubt on it or avoiding the issue altogether.
- “Rogers had previously declared the election ‘free and fair’ and compared Trump to a ‘gangster’ for pressing Georgia election officials to find more votes for him,” Marley wrote. “Now running for Senate with Trump’s endorsement, Rogers has tried to quickly move on when asked about those views in media interviews.”
- “With Rogers facing a GOP primary in August, he sought and won Trump’s endorsement in March,” Marley wrote. “Since then, Rogers has not always been as direct as he was in the past about his views on the 2020 election.”
- The article mentions Rogers anticipating Democratic cheating in a Detroit News op-ed from January as well as him dodging the question during a WJR 760AM radio interview in April, where he said he “answered that a hundred times.”
- The Michigan Democratic Party condemned Rogers’ Newsmax comments in an Aug. 23 statement.
- “If you can’t beat ‘em, spread conspiracy theories about elections…?” the party asked. “Rogers (once again) embraces dangerous election conspiracy theories and casts doubt on the integrity of our election system, saying it’s ‘really very concerning for us.’”
See also: Washington Post: In top races, Republicans try to stay quiet on Trump’s false 2020 claims.