-
The state appeals court will decide whether the Michigan Legislature exceeded its powers when it made sweeping changes to a pair of petition initiatives.
-
Voters overturned the state's prevailing wage law for state contracts in 2018, but Governor Gretchen Whitmer says a state agency has the authority to implement the rule on its own.
-
State Court of Claims Judge Elizabeth Gleicher ruled Wednesday that the Michigan Constitution’s due process clause is broad enough to include a woman’s right to an abortion.
-
An Oakland County judge has issued an injunction that blocks enforcement of Michigan’s 1931 law that bans abortions in most cases.
-
A challenge filed with the Michigan Court of Appeals seeks to overturn a decision that Governor Gretchen Whitmer cannot be forced to testify in an abortion rights case.
-
The Michigan Unemployment Insurance Agency has retroactively seized money from people it says received pandemic-related federal supplemental unemployment they didn’t actually qualify for. That led to a lawsuit from some affected people who say the state has no right to punish them for its own mistake without due process.
-
A series of court rulings Monday have left Michigan abortion providers scrambling, moving appointments, and even asking patients to make plans in other states.
-
An Oakland County 6th Circuit Court judge has granted Governor Gretchen Whitmer's request for a restraining order that blocks local prosecutors from filing charges under Michigan's 1931 felony abortion ban. Whitmer's request was in response to a Court of Appeals order that cleared the way for prosecutions from county prosecutors.
-
After restoring a law raising Michigan’s minimum wage to $12 an hour, the state Court of Claims is delaying the effects of the decision.
-
The Michigan Court of Claims is being asked to delay enforcing decisions to boost the state’s minimum wage and require employers to provide earned sick leave. That’s after the court ruled the Legislature violated the state constitution.