los Junta de Comisionados del Condado de Oakland is taking the next steps toward voting on a resolution opposing the proposed Michigan constitutional amendment that would require documentary proof of citizenship for voter registration and impose additional identification requirements when voting.
A vote on the resolution is expected during the full Oakland County Board of Commissioners meeting on Jueves, 16 de julio a 9:30am.
Coalition partners are asking Oakland County residents and organizations to attend the meeting, provide public comment, contact commissioners, and ask them to vote yes on the resolution.
Community members who want to help bring similar resolutions to other cities, townships, and counties should complete the local resolution campaign sign-up form so coalition partners can follow up with materials and next steps.
What the resolution says
Resolution #2026-6651, sponsored by Commissioner Yolanda Smith Charles, opposes the proposed constitutional amendment being advanced by Americans for Citizen Voting.
The resolution states that the proposal would require voters to provide documents such as a passport or birth certificate when registering to vote and additional documentation when casting a ballot. It also raises concerns about red tape, confusion, costs for voters, and new administrative requirements for local election officials.
If adopted, the resolution would also ask the Oakland County Clerk to send copies to Michigan’s other 82 counties and the Oakland County delegation in the state Legislature.
Why local action is important
Current state and federal law already prohibit noncitizens from voting. Michigan voters also approved constitutional voting protections in 2018 and 2022, including same-day voter registration, no-excuse absentee voting, and in-person early voting.
Documentary proof of citizenship requirements are not the same as Michigan’s current voter identification rules. The proposed constitutional amendment would require eligible voters to provide additional citizenship documents to register or update their voter registration.
The requirements could create particular barriers for people with disabilities, young voters, seniors, rural residents, married women and others who have changed their names, low-income voters, people experiencing housing instability, and people returning home from incarceration.
Local resolutions give county commissions, city councils, and township boards a way to affirm Michigan voters’ freedom to vote and oppose proposals that would add barriers to the voting process.
July 16 public comment and vote
Fecha: Jueves, 16 de julio
Tiempo: 9:30 AM
Ubicación: Junta de Comisionados del Condado de Oakland
1200 N. Telegraph Road
Pontiac, Michigan
Commissioners are expected to consider the resolution at this meeting.
Community members can help by:
- Attending the meeting and providing public comment
- Contacting Oakland County commissioners before the meeting
- Sharing the coalition letter and proposed resolution
- Asking commissioners to vote yes on Resolution #2026-6651
Public comment can be brief. Oakland County residents can explain why they oppose adding documentary proof of citizenship requirements to voter registration and why they want county leaders to protect the voting rights Michigan voters approved in 2018 and 2022.
Suggested public comment
My name is [name], and I am an Oakland County resident. I am asking the Board of Commissioners to vote yes on Resolution #2026-6651.
Michigan and federal law already prohibit noncitizens from voting. Requiring eligible voters to provide additional citizenship documents would add red tape, costs, and confusion to voter registration. These requirements could prevent eligible Michigan citizens from registering or updating their voter information.
Please support this resolution and protect the voting rights Michigan voters approved in 2018 y 2022.
Help bring resolutions to more Michigan communities
Nearly 50 nonpartisan organizations are working with residents to pass local resolutions opposing the Michigan documentary proof of citizenship ballot initiative and the additional red tape it would create for eligible voters.
The coalition includes organizations representing people with disabilities, young people, seniors, rural voters, transgender voters, Black and Brown voters, immigrant communities, people with prior convictions, low-income voters, faith communities, community service organizations, and pro-democracy advocates.
Community members can help bring a resolution to their city, township, or county. Read VAAC’s previous update about the statewide local resolutions campaign.
Complete the local resolution campaign sign-up form, and a coalition team member will follow up with materials and next steps.
Signing up does not require policy expertise. Participants may help by contacting local officials, sharing the coalition letter and resolution language, attending public meetings, or providing public comment.
For questions or suggestions about the resolutions campaign, contact Ben Gardner, Michigan Senior Campaign Manager with All Voting Is Local, at ben@allvotingislocal.org.

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