Interesting stuff, especially if Obama wins.

Proposal for replacing lieutenant governors not tied to Granholm rumors, sponsor says

By Amy Lane
Crain's Detroit Business
October 31, 2008

A resolution introduced in the state Capitol would set up a new process for installing a lieutenant governor in Michigan, adding to pre-election buzz about whether Gov. Jennifer Granholm will find new opportunities if Democrat Barack Obama is elected president.

But the resolution’s sponsor, state Rep. Steve Bieda, D-Warren, said neither his resolution nor a companion bill is being introduced “about any speculation about the governor.”

If a Michigan governor leaves office before a term is up, or if there is a vacancy in the office of the governor, the lieutenant governor becomes governor. But there is no provision in the state constitution for replacing the lieutenant governor.

State law provides for the Senate to pick an acting lieutenant governor from the same political party as the governor, but Michigan’s attorney general has determined that while the Senate could select its own presiding officer, it may not appoint a person to fill the vacancy of lieutenant governor because there is no authority under the constitution to fill a vacancy in that office.

Bieda said the process of selecting a lieutenant governor should be in the constitution. His measure is patterned after the 25th amendment to the U.S. constitution, which allows the country’s newly succeeding president to pick the vice president.

Under Bieda’s House Joint Resolution OOO, if Michigan’s lieutenant governor succeeds or fills a vacancy in the office of governor, the new governor would then select a new lieutenant governor and submit that nomination to the state Senate and House, which would put the selection up for a majority vote in each chamber.

Bieda’s resolution would need to pass the House and Senate by two-thirds majorities and would then go before voters in an upcoming general election. He is having a companion bill drafted that would set up the same new process in state law.

Bieda said he hopes to see both measures taken up after the House returns to session in November.

The term-limited lawmaker, who leaves office at the end of the year, said he has been working on the measures for some time and is not introducing them in preparation for Granholm to leave office before her term is up.

“It really kind of comes out of an academic interest I have in good government,” Bieda said.

If Granholm does leave office early, she would be succeeded by Lt. Gov. John Cherry.

In past weeks and months, speculation has mounted that Granholm, who has played an active role in the Obama campaign, might leave for an appointed post, such as one involving energy, or a federal judgeship.

Bill Ballenger, editor of the political newsletter Inside Michigan Politics, has his doubts.

“You always have this kind of talk. It gets down to whether she wants to leave, and whether the Obama administration wants her,” Ballenger said.

He said he thinks that Granholm likes being governor and takes pride in the job, and she “could be viewed as deserting the state in six years without completing the task.

“Does she want her legacy to be somebody who bailed out before she completed her term? My feeling is, I don’t think she would want to do that,” Ballenger said.

However, he said he sees “no question about it” that Bieda’s measures are being introduced on the possibility that Granholm might leave.

Liz Boyd, Granholm’s press secretary, said that “this is not the first time people have speculated on the governor’s future, and it won’t be the last. For the governor’s part, she is focused on the job she has.”