Lansing Update: “2020 Election Results: National and Statewide Races and Measures” and more…

2020 Election Results: National and Statewide Races and Measures

NOTE: Election results are still being finalized across the country. The latest Michigan results can be found at the Secretary of State's website: https://bit.ly/2I4WRiy.

Additionally, the Michigan House and Senate Oversight Committees are coming together for a joint meeting tomorrow, November 7. The purpose of the meeting is to begin an inquiry into the election and counting procedures within Michigan, both for this and future elections. In the announcement, House Speaker Lee Chatfield (R-Levering) wrote that the committee is not looking to change the results, but that "Americans needs certainty and unity. This will help."

U.S. Presidential Race: At the time of this email, the results have still not been finalized. However, from the vote count in Michigan, the state's sixteen electoral votes will be allocated to Joe Biden.

U.S Legislators:

State Races:

Statewide Ballot Proposals:

Michigan Catholic Conference (MCC) will provide further updates as they are available.

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U.S. Supreme Court Hears Oral Arguments in Key Religious Liberty Case

This week, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Fulton v. City of Philadelphia. The issue at hand is a decision by the City of Philadelphia to prohibit Catholic Social Services (CSS) from placing children into foster homes, despite CSS's exemplary record. The decision was not based on a complaint, nor on the agency keeping children from loving homes; it was because of the organization's longstanding beliefs about marriage. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) filed an amicus curiae brief in support of foster parent Sharonell Fulton, foster care worker and parent Toni Lynn Simms-Busch, and Catholic Social Services back in June. On Wednesday, November 4, USCCB issued the following statement:

"Catholics have been called to care for children who have been orphaned, or whose parents face unique difficulties in providing care, since the earliest days of our faith. We serve all children in need, without regard to race, religion, sex, or any other characteristic. We have done this for centuries, long before any government, because we believe every single person - especially the marginalized and powerless - deserves to experience the love of Jesus and be part of a family. The same core beliefs about human dignity and the wisdom of God's design that motivate Catholics to serve the vulnerable also shape our convictions about sex, marriage, and the right of children to a mother and a father. These commitments are inseparable. Today the Supreme Court heard arguments in a challenge to government exclusion of Catholics from providing foster care because we engage in this ministry as Catholics - that is, consistent with Church teaching on marriage and family. We pray the Court's ruling will fulfill the First Amendment's promise that religious believers may bring the full vitality of their faith to the public square, and will reject a hollowed-out pluralism that permits people of faith only to preach but not to practice."

To learn more about this issue and the case, read MCC's FOCUS: Catholic Charities-Uniting Children With Loving Families.

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