Senate Republicans relax bill that closes drop boxes early

Senate Republicans on Wednesday relaxed legislation that would have prohibited the use of absentee ballot drop boxes on Election Day, instead proposing to close them at 5 p.m. — three hours before Michigan polls close.

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Critics protest Michigan voting rights bill, supporters say it insures integrity of the vote

Hundreds of people gathered outside the state capitol in Lansing on Tuesday to protest a proposed bill they say would restrict voting rights in Michigan - including the Detroit branch of the NAACP, the UAW, and Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan.

The change, which did not appease opponents, was announced as the GOP-led Senate Elections Committee held its third hearing on measures in a 39-bill package, parts of which would restrict the absentee voting process.

Sen. Ed McBroom, a Vulcan Republican, said officials in Detroit — the state’s largest city — faced a "huge burden" collecting and counting thousands of ballots in drop boxes in November’s presidential election.

As introduced, his bill would have closed boxes across Michigan at 5 p.m. on the eve of an election instead of 8 p.m. on Election Night — 27 hours earlier. Now, they would be locked at 5 p.m. on Election Day.

RELATED: Protest held against GOP's proposed election integrity bills in Lansing

The goal is to let clerks gather and process ballots earlier "so they’re not out after hours working all night to process thousands and thousands of ballots," McBroom said. "This was really an effort to help with that administrative hurdle."

Absentee voters could return their ballots in person to their clerk’s office after 5 p.m., he said.

But critics of the legislation, including local election administrators, said drop boxes should remain open until 8 p.m.

RELATED: Ford, GM, and 34 other Michigan companies oppose GOP voting bills

"The fact is that drop boxes are a popular, convenient and secure way for voters to exercise their now-constitutional right... to vote by absentee ballot" under a 2018 constitutional amendment, said Nancy Wang, executive director of Voters Not Politicians. Amid a surge in absentee voting in 2020, she said, drop boxes "provided a safe way, especially during a global pandemic, to avoid lines on Election Day and problems with mail delivery."

The change to the bill did not appease opponents.

The panel did not vote on any bills. Testimony on the package will continue next week.