This story was originally published by Public News Service.
By Chrystal Blair, producer
Public News Service
April 21, 2026
A new push to limit corporate money in Michigan politics appears to be gaining traction.
There is strong bipartisan support for restricting political contributions from regulated monopolies and companies seeking government contracts, according to a survey commissioned by supporters of the proposal. Supporters said the measure would increase transparency and reduce “pay-to-play” politics, where political donations can influence government decisions.
Christy McGillivray, executive director of the group Voters Not Politicians, said the response from voters has been consistent across the political spectrum.
“It’s wildly popular,” McGillivray reported. “We are on track to meet our goal, and the bipartisan support is amazing with voters. Voters, regardless of political party, are furious about how money’s corrupted politics.”
Organizers must get nearly 360,000 valid signatures by May 27 to qualify for the ballot, aiming for closer to 450,000 to account for rejected entries. Critics of the proposal said even with limits in place, money will still find its way into politics, just through different, and sometimes harder-to-track, channels.
However, backers contended the effort is about fairness, arguing many Michiganders feel their voices are being overshadowed by big money in Lansing. McGillivray stressed the issue comes down to who lawmakers are ultimately responding to.
“Nothing in Lansing is changing, and they’re not being held accountable because fundamentally, the money in Lansing is what lawmakers are answering to instead of their constituents,” McGillivray underscored. “When that happens, that means people start losing faith in democracy.”
Supporters said the proposal could help rebuild trust in government by increasing transparency and making sure elected leaders answer to voters, not big donors.
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