Rep. John Conyers, Jr. may not be allowed on the ballot, but that won’t stop him from running.
A Michigan state official deemed the veteran lawmaker ineligible Tuesday to run for his 26th term in Congress due to issues over the collection of petitions, saying Conyers, 84, didn’t file enough valid signatures to make the ballot for the Democratic primary on Aug. 5. But Conyers’ campaign chair, state Senator Bret Johnson said Wednesday that if the 25-term congressman’s appeal to get on the ballot fails, he’s “fully prepared to do a write-in campaign.”
Wayne County Clerk Cathy Garrett said Conyers used a number of unqualified people — namely, those not registered to vote — to collect a substantial portion of his petition signatures.
Conyers has three days to file an appeal to the Michigan Secretary of State in an effort to overturn Tuesday’s decision, and Conyers’ campaign says they plan to submit their appeal by Friday, adding that the congressman will join an ACLU lawsuit — filed Monday — which claims that the state law requiring petition circulators to be registered voters is unconstitutional.
“It is a very unfortunate circumstance that an issue with a circulator of a petition would disqualify the signature of valid registered voter,” Garrett said in a statement. “It is my determination that in accordance with the current laws and statutes of the State of Michigan, the nominating petitions filed by Congressman John Conyers, Jr. are insufficient to allow his name to appear on the August 5, 2014 primary ballot,” she added.
Garrett said the office remains bound by “very specific and narrow instructions regarding candidate petitions” and “eagerly awaits the courts’ review.”
Serving Congress since 1965, Conyers, who will turn 85 on Friday, is a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus. He was the first black member to serve on the House Judiciary Committee and remains its ranking Democrat. His tenure in Congress exceeds all other African Americans.









