Pages

Monday, October 7, 2019

Gongwer Covers WMP Whitmer Whistleblower Controversy: Lawmakers Speak Out



By Brandon Hall
(Email Him At WestMIPolitics@Gmail.com)


From Friday's Gongwer:

"Republican lawmakers Friday said Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmer's declaration this week that longtime whistleblower protection language in each departmental budget for state employees is unconstitutional and thus unenforceable was a move that undermines government transparency and provides a chilling effect on the possibility those observing problems will come forward.

Ms. Whitmer declared an identical section in 13 budget bills unenforceable, asserting it violates the separation of powers. The language has been placed in budget bills each year dating back to the early 2000s.

"A department or state agency shall not take disciplinary action against an employee for communicating with a member of the Legislature or his or her staff," the section removed in each of the 13 budget bills said.

In the past, governors will recommend the removal of this language in their budget proposals. Then the Legislature placed the boilerplate language back in when passing budget bills. Finally, the Legislature in conference committee keeps the language and the governor has let it remain once it arrives on his or her desk.

The boilerplate language is not the only line of defense for whistleblowers. There is also the Whistleblowers' Protection Act, passed in 1980.

"For her to take that out is just indefensible," said Sen. Tom Barrett (R-Charlotte), whose district includes a large number of state employees.

Mr. Barrett chaired the Senate Appropriations Justice and Public Safety Subcommittee and said the move could cause a chilling effect for those who may have information on state government problems within agencies or complaints about supervisors, for example.

Mr. Barrett said it appears to him that Ms. Whitmer resents the idea of equal branches of government. He also called it hypocrisy for Democrats to be praising the current whistleblower complaint against President Donald Trump that has led to an impeachment investigation while not calling out a reduction in whistleblower protections on the state level.

Mr. Barrett said he has had a few complaints brought to his attention from state employees in the past and his wife works for the Department of Health and Human Services. He questioned the impact striking the language could have on state workers in his district as a result of removing an additional layer of protection.

"To me, it's disappointing to see that struck out," House Appropriations Chair Rep. Shane Hernandez (R-Port Huron) said.

Mr. Hernandez said the move weakens good governance, adding private suggestions from state employees on how to improve government efficiency as well as in addressing shortcomings in operations or leadership can be less likely to come to light as a result.

Sen. Aric Nesbitt (R-Lawton) went a step further, noting among the issues Ms. Whitmer campaigned on was government transparency, which by stripping the whistleblower language is a move toward doing the opposite while in office.

"She doesn't have their backs," said Mr. Nesbitt, who chairs the Senate Appropriations Licensing and Regulatory Affairs Subcommittee, of state employees.

Tiffany Brown, spokesperson for Ms. Whitmer, in a statement called whistleblower protections important and said executive directives issued by the governor shortly after taking office on issues including government ethics show a proactive approach by the governor on the topic.

However, she said whistleblower protections must comply with the Constitution, saying the boilerplate language does not.

"As the attorney general concluded, these provisions regarding communications with the Legislature, included in many appropriations bills, violate the state Constitution's multiple provisions requiring a separation of powers because a department's disciplinary policy is a core executive function," Ms. Brown said. "As state courts have affirmed, one branch of government cannot provide oversight for another branch in personnel matters."

She also added that the attorney general has concluded the provisions "violate the Constitution's rule against a law carrying out a purpose not encompassed in the law's title."

"Most bills that included this provision had as their purposes to make appropriations," Ms. Brown said. "This provision, however, did not make an appropriation nor create conditions on the spending of appropriated funds, and therefore violated this constitutional requirement."


Rep. Aaron Miller (R-Sturgis) chairs the House Appropriations School Aid and Department of Education Subcommittee. The education funding budgets he oversaw in committee were among the ones that did not contain the boilerplate language.

Despite him personally not having a large volume of communications with state employees nor anything that would approach the level of whistleblower content, he said there is the optics of what Ms. Whitmer did to consider.

"The message it sets is what's more important," Mr. Miller said. "I don't think it's a good one."


Read more:

Breaking: Governor Whitmer Ends Whistleblower Protection For State Employees

Whitmer Begged Lansing Lobbyists: Get Republicans To Support My Gas Tax Hike! (Or Have Funding For Your Projects Vetoed)

 _________________________________________________________________
Brandon Hall is a lifelong political nerd from Grand Haven, and is the Managing Editor of West Michigan Politics.

>>>Email him at WestMIPolitics@Gmail.com
Facebook
Twitter

Michigan Freedom Fund's Tony Daunt: WMP Whistleblower Revelations Are A "Bombshell"



































By Brandon Hall
(Email Him At WestMIPolitics@Gmail.com)


Michigan Freedom Fund Executive Director Tony Daunt is calling the West Michigan Politics story that broke last Wednesday about Governor Whitmer removing protections for whistleblowers a "bombshell."

Daunt writes:

"This is a bombshell that’s gone almost entirely unreported in all the coverage spilling out of Governor Gretchen Whitmer’s use of the veto pen to eliminate $13 million for county sheriffs to patrol local roads, strip $35 million from public charter schools serving minority students and low-income families, and perhaps most ridiculously, reduce road funding by $375 million after spending two years grandstanding about “Fixing the Damn Roads”. Apparently, what she really meant was “Raise the Damn Taxes”!



Buried among the Governor’s 147 line-item vetoes in the state budget was a shocking and appalling move to greatly reduce government transparency and threaten whistleblowers in state Government.

Whitmer vetoed a section in each of the Department budgets that reads:

“A department or state agency shall not take disciplinary action against an employee for communicating with a member of the legislature or his or her staff.”
She vetoed the same provision in 13 budgets. That’s every last one of the state’s non-school budgets. 

She vetoed whistleblower protections 13 times. 13. Times.

The boilerplate language eliminated by Whitmer is designed to protect whistleblowers in state government who may seek to expose government malfeasance, bad behavior, abuse of taxpayer funds, or any number of other troubling behaviors inside state departments.

It was written and approved by Republicans and Democrats in the legislature who champion government transparency, and has been part of the budget language since at least 2003!

Not surprisingly, her move to draw the curtains on any potential bad behavior inside her own departments didn’t make the Governor’s list of talking points.

It’s a potentially devastating move for integrity in state government. And it begs a pair of questions. What’s the Governor worried about? Or what’s she trying to hide?"

  _________________________________________________________________
Brandon Hall is a lifelong political nerd from Grand Haven, and is the Managing Editor of West Michigan Politics.

>>>Email him at WestMIPolitics@Gmail.com
Facebook
Twitter

Saturday, October 5, 2019

State Senator Tom Barrett DESTROYS Governor Whitmer For Removing State Employee Whistleblower Protections

















By Brandon Hall
(Email Him At WestMIPolitics@Gmail.com)

State Senator Tom Barrett is speaking out after Gov. Gretchen Whitmer shockingly and unexpectedly removed whistleblower protections for state employees who talk to legislators earlier this week.

"It’s ironic that at the same time the Democratic leadership in Washington is applying for sainthood for the “whistleblower” attacking President Trump, that Governor Whitmer would take this action," Barrett tells West Michigan Politics. "It clearly proves both are just partisan power grabs."


Barrett has frequently spoken with state employees during his time in Lansing.

"I have personally been approached by state employees with candid concerns regarding different issues throughout my tenure in the MIchigan Legislature," Barrett said. "Each time, I reassured the individual that they would not face disciplinary action if it were discovered that they brought their concerns forward.  Now, Governor Whitmer has removed key protections for state employees."

Barrett believes Whitmer wants to grab as much power as possible.

"Between her recent budget vetoes, State Administrative Board moves, and striking whistleblower protections for state employees, her actions show that she only wants to consolidate power in state government at the very the top of the executive branch."

State Rep. Steve Johnson also blasted Whitmer in a statement to West Michigan Politics.

"State employees should always be free to expose wrongdoing in the executive branch," Johnson said. "It's important we find out more about this."

Stay tuned!

  _________________________________________________________________
Brandon Hall is a lifelong political nerd from Grand Haven, and is the Managing Editor of West Michigan Politics.

>>>Email him at WestMIPolitics@Gmail.com
Facebook
Twitter

Friday, October 4, 2019

Whitmer Begged Lansing Lobbyists: Get Republicans To Support My Gas Tax Hike! (Or Have Funding For Your Projects Vetoed)



By Brandon Hall
(Email Him At WestMIPolitics@Gmail.com)

West Michigan Politics has learned Governor Whitmer asked her staff to organize meetings with every multi-client lobbyist in Lansing in September, subsequently scheduling back-to-back appointments with all of them, on the same day, each half hour. 

In those meetings, Whitmer told all of them if they didn't get the Republicans to support her  gas tax hike, she would line item veto all of their priorities that Republicans had already placed in the budget.


The lobbyists, however, were not pleased with Whitmer's demands, and didn't make a major effort to push the gas tax hike...


This seems to explain some of Whitmer's bizarre and controversial budget cuts earlier this week.

Stay tuned!

Breaking: Governor Whitmer Ends Whistleblower Protection For State Employees

Developing: Governor Whitmer Threatened State Employees: Don't Talk With Legislators During September Budget Negotiations!



 _________________________________________________________________

Brandon Hall is a lifelong political nerd from Grand Haven, and is the Managing Editor of West Michigan Politics.

>>>Email him at WestMIPolitics@Gmail.com
Facebook
Twitter


Thursday, October 3, 2019

Developing: Governor Whitmer Threatened State Employees: Don't Talk With Legislators During September Budget Negotiations!


Gov. Gretchen Whitmer


By Brandon Hall

(Email Him At WestMIPolitics@Gmail.com)

Governor Whitmer issued clear orders to department leaders in state government throughout meetings a few weeks ago: state employees are forbidden to talk with legislators during the final, heated month of budget negotiations.

However, some state employees ignored the directive, feeling it was more important to do what they thought was right instead of playing partisan politics with state programs.

Now, many of these employees fear for their jobs after Governor Whitmer shockingly and unexpectedly eliminated whistleblower protections for state employees who talk to legislators earlier this week. 

That rule stood for decades through multiple Governors from both parties before Whitmer removed it.

Rep. Steve Johnson
State Rep. Steve Johnson blasted Whitmer's decision Thursday afternoon in a statement to West Michigan Politics.

"State employees should always be free to expose wrongdoing in the executive branch," Johnson said. "It's important we find out more about this."

Exactly! It's pretty straight forward...

Here is what Whitmer removed from every budget:


"The department shall not take disciplinary action against an employee for communicating with a member of the legislature or his or her staff."

Sadly, the media has been completely silent on this issue because of so much other drama in Whitmer's budget... Stay tuned!

Read more:

Breaking: Governor Whitmer Ends Whistleblower Protection For State Employees

Whitmer Begged Lansing Lobbyists: Get Republicans To Support My Gas Tax Hike! (Or Have Funding For Your Projects Vetoed)




 _________________________________________________________________
Brandon Hall is a lifelong political nerd from Grand Haven, and is the Managing Editor of West Michigan Politics.

>>>Email him at WestMIPolitics@Gmail.com
Facebook
Twitter

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

Breaking: Governor Whitmer Ends Whistleblower Protection For State Employees

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer

By Brandon Hall
(Email Him At WestMIPolitics@Gmail.com)

Governor Whitmer has eliminated a longstanding rule protecting whistleblowers who work for the State of Michigan.

State employees are no longer protected if they expose questionable activities to state legislators.

Here is what Whitmer removed:


""The department shall not take disciplinary action against an employee for communicating with a member of the legislature or his or her staff."


A Whitmer administration source says that language is somehow "unenforceable," which simply doesn't add up.

The stunning move comes as Democrats across the country have suddenly and fervently started defending the sanctity and importance of whistleblowers.

Real whistleblowers like Julian Assange, Edward Snowden, and Bradley (Chelsea) Manning sure wish they were consistent...



Read more:

Developing: Governor Whitmer Threatened State Employees: Don't Talk With Legislators During September Budget Negotiations!


 _________________________________________________________________
Brandon Hall is a lifelong political nerd from Grand Haven, and is the Managing Editor of West Michigan Politics.

>>>Email him at WestMIPolitics@Gmail.com
Facebook
Twitter

Bill Huizenga's Shady Campaign Finances May Have Finally Caught Up With Him In House Ethics Investigation



By Brandon Hall
(Email him at WestMiPolitics@Gmail.com)


News broke this week that Rep. Bill Huizenga faces a House Ethics Committee investigation was not a surprise to anyone who has followed the situation over the years. 

According to reports filed with the United States House of Representatives Ethics Committee, Huizenga failed to provide adequate information on more than one occasion.





WMP previously reported that Huizenga's "Huizenga House Fund," from his time as a State Representative,  had numerous problems, including over a dozen un-filed campaign finance reports from 2004-2009. 

Subsequently, I filed a complaint with the Secretary of State's office.

Breaking: Rep. Huizenga's Super Shady State House Finance Issues Remain Unresolved 10 Years Later


 >>>Read the complaint to the Secretary of State HERE

On February 11, 2015, Huizenga or a representative met with the Secretary of State's office and filed the information required in the 14 outstanding reports.

On March 6, 2015, the Secretary of State requested Huizenga, because of his role as treasurer of the fund, provide an official affidavit saying his lack of disclosure of $14,000 worth of contributions was really an honest "oversight."


WMP: Developing: Rep. Huizenga Responds To Campaign Finance Controversies After Meeting With Secretary of State Officials



 _________________________________________________________________

Brandon Hall is a lifelong political nerd from Grand Haven, and is the Managing Editor of West Michigan Politics.

>>>Email him at WestMIPolitics@Gmail.com
Facebook
Twitter